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SY3057 Football and Society | Readinglists@Leicester 09/30/21 SY3057 Football and Society | readinglists@leicester SY3057 Football and Society View Online 1. Lewis, R. W. Innovation not Invention: A Reply to Peter Swain Regarding the Professionalization of Association Football in England and its Diffusion. Sport in History 30, 475–488 (2010). 2. Allison, Lincoln. Association Football and the Urban Ethos. Stanford Journal of International Studies (1978). 3. Bailey, S. Living Sports History: Football at Winchester, Eton and Harrow. The Sports Historian 15, 34–53 (1995). 4. Baker, N. Whose Hegemony? The Origins of the Amateur Ethos in Nineteenth Century English Society. Sport in History 24, 1–16 (2004). 5. Dunning, E. Sport matters: sociological studies of sport, violence, and civilization. (Routledge, 2001). 6. Dunning, E. & Sheard, K. G. Barbarians, gentlemen and players: a sociological study of the 1/42 09/30/21 SY3057 Football and Society | readinglists@leicester development of rugby football. (Frank Cass, 2005). 7. Garnham, N. Patronage, Politics and the Modernization of Leisure in Northern England: the case of Alnwick’s Shrove Tuesday football match. The English Historical Review 117, 1228–1246 (2002). 8. Giulianotti, R. Football: a sociology of the global game. (Polity Press, 1999). 9. Harvey, A. Football: the first hundred years : the untold story. vol. Sport in the global society (Routledge, 2005). 10. Holt, R. Sport and the British: a modern history. vol. Oxford studies in social history (Clarendon Press, 1989). 11. Hutchinson, J. Sport, Education and Philanthropy in Nineteenth-century Edinburgh: The Emergence of Modern Forms of Football. Sport in History 28, 547–565 (2008). 12. Kitching, G. ‘From Time Immemorial’: The Alnwick Shrovetide Football Match and the Continuous Remaking of Tradition 1828–1890. The International Journal of the History of Sport 28, 831–852 (2011). 13. Kitching, G. ‘Old’ Football and the ‘New’ Codes: Some Thoughts on the ‘Origins of Football’ Debate and Suggestions for Further Research. The International Journal of the History of Sport 28, 1733–1749 (2011). 2/42 09/30/21 SY3057 Football and Society | readinglists@leicester 14. Curry, G. Forgotten man: The contribution of John Dyer Cartwright to the football rules debate. Soccer & Society 4, 71–86 (2003). 15. Williams, J. Red men: Liverpool Football Club : the biography. (Mainstream, 2010). 16. Dunning, E. Sport matters: sociological studies of sport, violence, and civilization. (Routledge, 2001). 17. Dunning, E. Something of a Curate’s Egg: Comments on Adrian Harvey's ‘An Epoch in the Annals of National Sport’. The International Journal of the History of Sport 18, 88–94 (2001). 18. Collins, T. History, Theory and the ‘Civilizing Process’. Sport in History 25, 289–306 (2005). 19. Curry, G. Forgotten man: The contribution of John Dyer Cartwright to the football rules debate. Soccer & Society 4, 71–86 (2003). 20. Curry, G. & Dunning, E. The problem with revisionism: how new data on the origins of modern football have led to hasty conclusions. Soccer & Society 14, 429–445 (2013). 21. 3/42 09/30/21 SY3057 Football and Society | readinglists@leicester Goulstone, J. The working‐class origins of modern football. The International Journal of the History of Sport 17, 135–143 (2000). 22. Harvey, A. The Emergence of Football in Nineteenth-Century England: The Historiographic Debate. The International Journal of the History of Sport 30, 2154–2163 (2013). 23. Harvey, A. Football: the first hundred years : the untold story. vol. Sport in the global society (Routledge, 2005). 24. Harvey, A. ‘An Epoch in the Annals of National Sport’: Football in Sheffield and the Creation of Modern Soccer and Rugby. The International Journal of the History of Sport 18, 53–87 (2001). 25. Holt, R. Sport and the British: a modern history. vol. Oxford studies in social history (Clarendon Press, 1989). 26. James, G. & Day, D. The Emergence of an Association Football Culture in Manchester 1840–1884. Sport in History 34, 49–74 (2014). 27. Lewis, R. W. Innovation not Invention: A Reply to Peter Swain Regarding the Professionalization of Association Football in England and its Diffusion. Sport in History 30, 475–488 (2010). 28. Kathleen E. McCrone. Play Up! Play Up! and Play the Game! Sport at the Late Victorian 4/42 09/30/21 SY3057 Football and Society | readinglists@leicester Girls’ Public School. Journal of British Studies 23, 106–134 (1984). 29. McCrone, K. Class, gender and English women’s sport 1890-1914. Journal of Sport History 18, 159–182 (1991). 30. Lewis, R. W. The genesis of professional football: Bolton‐Blackburn‐Darwen, the centre of innovation 1878–85. The International Journal of the History of Sport 14, 21–54 (1997). 31. Mangan, J. A. Missing men: schoolmasters and the early years of Association Football. Soccer & Society 9, 170–188 (2008). 32. Park, J. Sport, dress reform and the emancipation of women in Victorian England: a reappraisal. The International Journal of the History of Sport 6, 10–30 (1989). 33. Neddam *, F. Constructing masculinities under Thomas Arnold of Rugby (1828–1842): gender, educational policy and school life in an early‐Victorian public school. Gender and Education 16, 303–326 (2004). 34. Perkin, H. Teaching the nations how to play: sport and society in the British empire and commonwealth. The International Journal of the History of Sport 6, 145–155 (1989). 35. Reid, D. A. Folk‐football, the aristocracy and cultural change: a critique of Dunning and Sheard. The International Journal of the History of Sport 5, 224–238 (1988). 5/42 09/30/21 SY3057 Football and Society | readinglists@leicester 36. Swain, P. & Harvey, A. On Bosworth Field or the Playing Fields of Eton and Rugby? Who Really Invented Modern Football? The International Journal of the History of Sport 29, 1425–1445 (2012). 37. Swain, P. The Origins of Football Debate: The ‘Grander Design and the Involvement of the Lower Classes’, 1818–1840. Sport in History 1–25 (2014) doi:10.1080/17460263.2014.882399. 38. Swain, P. Cultural Continuity and Football in Nineteenth-century Lancashire. Sport in History 28, 566–582 (2008). 39. Tony Arnold, A. J. Harnessing the Forces of Commercialism: The Financial Development of the Football Association, 1863–1975. Sport in Society 7, 232–248 (2004). 40. William J. Baker. The Making of a Working-Class Football Culture in Victorian England. Journal of Social History 13, 241–251 (1979). 41. Collins, T. & Vamplew, W. The Pub, the Drinks Trade and the Early Years of Modern Football. The Sports Historian 20, 1–17 (2000). 42. CURRY, G. Playing for money: James J. Lang and emergent soccer professionalism in Sheffield. Soccer and Society 5, 336–355 (2004). 6/42 09/30/21 SY3057 Football and Society | readinglists@leicester 43. Dixon, P. & Garnham, N. Drink and the Professional Footballer in 1890s England and Ireland. Sport in History 25, 375–389 (2005). 44. Jones, S. G. Sport, politics and the working class: organised labour and sport in inter-war Britain. vol. International studies in the history of sport (Manchester University Press, 1988). 45. Giulianotti, R. Football: a sociology of the global game. (Polity Press, 1999). 46. Kennedy, D. Locality and professional football club development: the demographics of football club support in late victorian Liverpool. Soccer and Society 5, 371–391 (2004). 47. Charles P. Korr. West Ham United Football Club and the Beginnings of Professional Football in East London, 1895-1914. Journal of Contemporary History 13, 211–232 (1978). 48. Mason, T. Association football and English society, 1863-1915. (Harvester Press [etc.], 1980). 49. Russell, D. Football and the English: a social history of Association Football in England, 1863-1995. (Carnegie Publishing, 1997). 50. Shiels, R. The fatalities at the Ibrox disaster of 1902. The Sports Historian 18, 148–155 7/42 09/30/21 SY3057 Football and Society | readinglists@leicester (1998). 51. Taylor, M. The association game: a history of British football. (Pearson Longman, 2008). 52. Vamplew, W. Sports crowd disorders in Britain, 1870-1914: causes and controls. Journal of Sport History 7, 5–20 (1980). 53. Colin Veitch. ‘Play up! Play up! And Win the War!’ Football, the Nation and the First World War 1914-15. Journal of Contemporary History 20, 363–378 (1985). 54. Walvin, J. The people’s game: the history of football revisited. (Mainstream, 1994). 55. Tony Arnold, A. J. Harnessing the Forces of Commercialism: The Financial Development of the Football Association, 1863–1975. Sport in Society 7, 232–248 (2004). 56. Collins, T. & Vamplew, W. The Pub, the Drinks Trade and the Early Years of Modern Football. The Sports Historian 20, 1–17 (2000). 57. CURRY, G. Playing for money: James J. Lang and emergent soccer professionalism in Sheffield. Soccer and Society 5, 336–355 (2004). 58. 8/42 09/30/21 SY3057 Football and Society | readinglists@leicester Giulianotti, R. Football: a sociology of the global game. (Polity Press, 1999). 59. Fishwick, N. English football and society, 1910-1950. vol. International studies in the history of sport (Manchester University Press, 1989). 60. Jones, S. G. Sport, politics and the working class: organised labour and sport in inter-war Britain. vol. International studies in the history of sport (Manchester University Press, 1988). 61. Charles P. Korr. West Ham United Football Club and the Beginnings of Professional Football in East London, 1895-1914. Journal of Contemporary History 13, 211–232 (1978). 62. Mason, T. Association football and English society, 1863-1915. (Harvester Press [etc.], 1980). 63. Taylor, M. & Taylor, R. Something for the weekend, sir? Leisure, ecstasy and identity in football and contemporary religion. Leisure Studies 16, 37–49 (1997). 64. Riordan, J. Amateurism, Sport and the Left: Amateurism for All Versus Amateur Elitism. Sport in History 26, 468–483 (2006). 65. Russell, D. Football and the English: a social history of Association Football in England, 1863-1995.
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