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Sports in American History 2nd Edition
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Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Sporting Experiences in Colonial America, 1400–1750

Native American Pastimes and Sports

Influence of Religion on English Colonists

Sport in American Colonies

Summary

Chapter 2. Sport and Pastimes in the American Revolutionary Era and Early National Period, 1750–1820

The Great Awakening and the Place of Sport

Consumerism and Changing Patterns of Colonial Life

The Enlightenment in America and Ideas of Sport and the Body

Frontier and Backcountry Sport

Women’s Active Recreation in the Revolutionary Era and Early National Period

Native American Sport

Sporting Practices During the American Revolutionary War

Turn of the Nineteenth Century and Societal Patterns

Summary

Chapter 3. Antebellum Health Reforms and Sporting Forms, 1820–1860

Overview of the Antebellum Period

Health Reformers

Muscular Christianity

Women and Physical Activity

Rural Sporting Practices

Rise of Agricultural and Sporting Journalism

Sporting Practices of the Middle and Upper Classes

Public Spaces for Health and Sport

Sporting Pastimes of African Americans and Native Americans

Immigrants and Sporting Cultures

Summary

Chapter 4. Rise of Rationalized and Modern Sport, 1850–1870

Concept of Modern Sport

Subcommunities and the Growth of Modern Sport

Sporting Fraternity

Growth of Sports Clubs and Advancing Rational Recreation

Growth of American Team Sport and Competition

Rise of Intercollegiate Sport

The Civil War and Sporting Experiences

Summary

Chapter 5. New Identities and Expanding Modes of Sport in the Gilded Age, 1870–1890

Sport and Social Stratification

Maintaining Ethnic Forms of Leisure

Development of an Intercollegiate Sporting Culture

Male Sporting Culture

Business of Sport

Gendered Sport, Class, and Social Roles

Regulation of Sport: Amateurism Versus Professionalism

Summary

Chapter 6. American Sport and Social Change During the Early Progressive Era, 1890–1900

Social Reformers of the Progressive Era

Play and Games in American Ideology

Recreational Spaces

Back-to-Nature Movement

Ethnic Groups

Body Culture

Sport and Technology

Modern Olympic Games

Summary

Chapter 7. Sport as Symbol: Acculturation and Imperialism, 1900–1920

Sport, Ethnicity, and the Quest for Social Mobility

Assimilation of Disparate Groups in American Society

Challenging Gender Boundaries

Resistance to Social Reform

Sport and Colonialism

Sport During World War I

Summary

Chapter 8. Sport, Heroic Athletes, and Popular Culture, 1920–1950

War, Depression, and the Shaping of America

Social Change and the Spread of Sport

Heroes in the Golden Age

Media and the Commercialization of Sport

Summary

Chapter 9. Sport as TV Spectacle, Big Business, and Political Site, 1950–1980

Sport in the Cold War

Evolution of the Sport–Media Relationship

Incorporation of Alternative Heroes

Professional Sport and Labor Relations

Sport and the Civil Rights Movement

Sport, Narcissism, and the Existential Search for Self

Scientific Advancements and the Growth of Sport

Summary

Chapter 10. Globalized Sport, 1980–2000

Corporate Sporting Culture

Drawing Fans to Baseball

Michael Jordan and the Growth of Professional Basketball

Intercollegiate Sport and the NCAA

Women and Sport

Drug and Body Abuse Among Athletes

Violence in Sport

Discrimination at the End of the Twentieth Century

Individuality and Sport Icons

Alternative Sports

Summary

Chapter 11. Sport in the Early Twenty-First Century, 2000-2015

Business of Professional Sports Teams

Intercollegiate Sport and Conference Changes

Title IX and Sport Leadership

Women’s Professional Teams and Endorsements

Modern Olympic Challenges and Stars

Sporting Crises

Traumatic Brain Injury

X Games and Alternative Sports

Youth Sports

Rise of the Runner

The Future of Sport

Summary

About the Author

Gerald R. Gems, PhD, is a professor in the kinesiology department at North Central College in Naperville, Illinois. Gems serves on the Executive Council and Scientific Committee of the International Society for the History of Physical Education and Sport and is a past president of the North American Society for Sport History. He presented the 2016 Routledge Keynote where he received the Routledge Prize in Sport History.

Dr. Gems is an international scholar and the author of more than 200 publications, including 18 books. He was president of the North American Society for Sport History (NASSH) from 2003 to 2005 as well as the book review editor of the Journal of Sport History for more than two decades. He also received the Fulbright Senior Specialist Award for 2007 to 2012 and was an Illinois Roads Scholar in history from 1999 to 2003.

Dr. Gems earned his PhD in sport history at the University of Maryland. In addition to his role at North Central College, Dr. Gems serves as the vice president for the International Society for the History of Physical Education and Sport (ISHPES).

Linda J. Borish, PhD, an associate professor of history and gender and women’s studies at Western Michigan University and is jointly appointed in the departments of history and gender and women’s studies. Dr. Borish has focused her research on American women’s sport and health history. Her research has appeared in both national and international publications. She is lead editor for The Routledge History of American Sport (Routledge, 2016), and was selected in 2001-2002 as the International Ambassador for the North American Society for Sport History and also served on its Executive Council and Publications Board. She is executive producer and historian of the documentary film Jewish Women in American Sport: Settlement Houses to the Olympics and has received numerous research grants related to American women and sport history in rural and urban contexts. Borish was the book review coeditor of the Journal of Sport History from 1996 to 2000.

Dr. Borish earned her PhD in American studies from the University of Maryland at College Park. In addition to her role at Western Michigan University, Borish is a research associate at the Hadassah-Brandeis Institute, Brandeis University.

Gertrud Pfister, PhD, is a professor at the University of Copenhagen in Denmark. She has earned PhDs in sport history and sociology at the University of Regensburg and the Ruhr-University Bochum. She was president of the International Sport Sociology Society from 2001 to 2007. Pfister was also president of the International Society for the History of Sport and Physical Education from 1993 to 2000 and won the association’s award for lifelong achievements in the area of sport history in 2005.

 She won the Darlene Kluka Award of the Women`s Sport Foundation in 2006, the Award of the European Working Group Women in Sport in 2009, the Dorothy Ainsworth Research Award of the International Association of Physical Education and Sport for Girls and Women (IAPESGW), and the Els Schröder Award of the German Gymnastic Association (DTB) for research on women and sport 2013.

Pfister earned honorary doctorates at the Semmelweis University in Budapest 2007 and at the University of Malmö in 2013.

She received tthe Order of the Dannebrog, as a knight 1. Class, from the Danish queen in 2015 and the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany, 1. Class, in 2016.

 Pfister is a fellow of the American Academy of Kinesiology and Physical Education and the European College of Sport Science.

Reviews

“An ideal curriculum textbook, Sports in American History: From Colonization to Globalization is exceptionally well written, organized, and presented. Very highly recommended for both community and academic library sports history reference collections and supplemental studies reading lists, Sports in American History will be much appreciated by both academia and nonspecialist general readers with an interest in the culture and history of American sports.”—Midwest Book Review (review of first edition) Sports in American History does a more than laudable job of including the ways in which individual women and nonwhites participated in and shaped American sport history; it also faithfully discusses and describes how the processes of colonization and Americanization and globalization occur, both through sport and concurrently.—Matt Hodler, Visiting Assistant Professor in Sport Leadership & Management, Miami University Department of Kinesiology & Health

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