J O U R N a L W a T C H

J O U R N a L W a T C H

H-Sport Journal Watch. First Quarter 2018 J O U R N A L W A T C H H-Sport Journal and periodical review First Quarter 2018 https://networks.h-net.org/node/2622/pages/2883/h-sport-journal-watch March 15, 2018 ENGLISH-LANGUAGE SPORT JOURNALS Compiled by Patrick Salkeld, University of Central Oklahoma [email protected] International Journal of the History of Sport, 34, no. 7-8 (2017) https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fhsp20/34/7-8?nav=tocList Articles • The Origins of Football in Spain: From the First Press Appearance to the Constitution of the First Clubs (1868-1903), by Xavier Torrebadella-Flix, by Javier Olivera-Betrán & Mireia M. Bou, 471-497 • Football Club Formation and the Lancashire Leisure Class, 1857-1870, by Peter Swain, 498-516 • Playing with Our Friends and Making Money: Real Madrid FC’s Economic Model and the Impact of International Friendly Matches, by Juan Antonio Simón, 517-534 • Sandwiched Between Sport and Politics: Fédération Internationale de l’Automobile, Formula 1, and Non-Democratic Regimes, by Hans Erik Næss, 535-553 Copyright © 2017 Patrick Salkeld, distributed under the Creative Commons 3.0 license H-Net permits the redistribution and reprinting of this work for non-profit, educational purposes, with full and accurate attribution to the author(s), web location, date of publication, H-Sport, and H-Net: Humanities & Social Sciences Online. For other uses, contact the H-Sport editorial staff at [email protected] H-Sport Journal Watch. First Quarter 2018 • What’s Wrong with a Little Swinging? Indian Clubs as a Tool of Suppression and Rebellion in Post-Rebellion India, by Conor Heffernan, 554-577 • ‘Sandwich-Men Parade the Streets’: Conceptualizing Regionalism and the North-South Divide in British Lawn Tennis, by Robert J. Lake & Andy Lusis, 578-598 • The ‘White Man’s Game’? West Indian Cricket Tours of the 1900s, by Geoffrey Levett, 599-618 • Touch Rugby, Masculinity and Progressive Politics in Durban, South Africa, 1985-1990, by Robert Morell, 619-638 • ‘The Winner Takes It All’: Values and Benefits of Israeli Sports Gambling Advertisements, by Osnat Roth-Cohen & Ilan Tamir, 639-655 • The Mysterious Crescent-Shaped Amphitheatre Weapon: A New Interpretation, by Alfonso Manas, 656-675 • The History of Modern Organized Badminton and the Men’s Team Thomas Cup Tournaments, 1948-1979, by Peng Han Lim & Mohd Salleh Aman, 676-696 • Sport as a Factor of Nation Branding: A Quantitative Approach, by Michał Marcin Kobierecki & Piotr Strożek, 697-712 International Journal of the History of Sport, 34, no. 9 (2017) https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fhsp20/34/9?nav=tocList Special Issue: The History and Social Role of Sport in Socialist Yugoslavia Introduction • From the Concept of the Communist ‘New Man’ to Nationalist Hooliganism: Research Perspectives on Sport in Socialist Yugoslavia, by Dario Brentin & Dejan Zec, 713-728 Articles • Laying the Foundations of Physical Culture: The Stadium Revolution in Socialist Yugoslavia, by Richard Mills, 729-752 • How Doing Sport Became a Culture: Producing the Concept of Physical Cultivation of the Yugoslavs, by Ana Petrov, 753-766 • The 1984 Sarajevo Winter Olympics and Identity-Formation in Late Socialist Sarajevo, by Zlatko Jovanovic, 767-782 • FC Red Star Belgrade and the Multiplicity of Social Identifications in Socialist Yougoslavia: Representative Dimensions of the ‘Big Four’ Football Clubs, by Martin Blasius, 783-799 • Like a Bridge Over Troubled Adriatic Water: The Complex Relationship between Italiana and Yugoslavian Sporting Diplomacy (1945-1954), by Nicola Sbetti, 800-814 • Blind-Alleys on the Road to Communism: ‘Isms’ of the Automobile Sport in Socialist Yugoslavia, 1945-1992, by Marko Miljković, 815-831 • How Falcons Became Partizans, by Hrvoje Klasić, 832-847 • Gender Policies and Amateur Sports in Early Yugoslav Socialism, by Ivan Simić, 848- 861 Page - 2 - of 15 H-Sport Journal Watch. First Quarter 2018 International Journal of the History of Sport, 34, no. 10 (2017) https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fhsp20/current?nav=tocList Special Issue: Sport in the Peripheries Introduction • Sporting Peripheries, by Marta Kurkowska-Budzan, Marcin Stasiak & Paul Newsham, 863-865 Articles • Encounters on the Dirt Track: Polish—British Speedway from 1955, by Paul Newsham, 866-879 • Strong Periphery, Weak Centre: The Paradox of Sport in Early Twentieth-Century Romania, by Bogdan Popa, 880-888 • Girls and Women and the Role of Sport in Different Age Groups: Poland 1918-1939, by Katarzyna Sierakowska, 889-898 • Rattle Running, Dry Wrestling, and Boxing in … Opera, or Regional Sports and Games in the Historical and Cultural Tradition of Eastern Europe, by Wojciech Lipoński, 899- 914 • Football, Place, and Community in a New Zealand Mining Town, 1877-1939, by Charles Little, 915-934 • ‘Between Work and Laziness’: Leisure in the Polish Countryside (1945-1989), by Ewelina Szpak, 935-942 • Small Nation, Big Sport: Basque Ball – Its Past and Present Cultural meanings for the Basques, by Bartosz Prabucki, 943-956 • Making Sport History in the (Semi)Periphery: The Portuguese Perspective, by Francisco Pinheiro, 957-969 • Ethnicity as an Exercise in Sport: European Immigrants, Soccer Fandom, and the Making of Canadian Multiculturalism, 1945-1979, by Stephen Fielding, 970-991 • Writing the History of Sport in Poland. The Underestimated Potential of the Cultural History Perspective, by Marta Kurkowska-Budzan, 992-1002 International Journal of the History of Sport, 34, no. 11, 2017 https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/fhsp20/34/11?nav=tocList Americas Regional Issue • Ali-Frazier 1: Black Gladiators, White Promoters, and the Economics of Big-Time Boxing, by Gregory Kaliss, 1003-1019 • Dreams of Democracy, or the Reasons for Hoosiers’ Enduring Appeal, by Paul Christesen, 1020-1060 • Futbol para Todos (Soccer for All): Democratization, Populist Legitimization or Quasi- Authoritarianism, by Tamir Bar-On & Andrés M. De Gaetano, 1061-1087 • A Tale of Two Presidents: The Rise and Fall of Division 1 Athletics at Birmingham- Southern College, by Jim Watkins, 1088-1111 Page - 3 - of 15 H-Sport Journal Watch. First Quarter 2018 • Learning the American Way: Sports International and American Soft Power, by Austin Duckworth & Thomas M. Hunt, 1112-1127 • Honour and Dignity: The Peru Case at the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, by Sérgio Settani Giglio, 1128-1139 • John ‘Army’ Howard, Canada’s First Black Olympian: A Nation-Building Paradox, by Ornella Nzindukiyimana, 1140-1160 • Political Protection: The International Olympic Committee’s UN Diplomacy in the 1980s, by Barbara Keys, 1161-1178 • Virtual Patriot Games: American Football in The Times of London, 1888-1910, by Lars Dzikus & Yoav Dubinsky, 1179-1197 International Journal of Sport Policy and Politics, 10, no. 1 (2018) https://www.tandfonline.com/toc/risp20/10/1?nav=tocList Special Issue: Austerity Editorial • Sport policy and politics in an era of austerity, by Daniel Parnell, Peter Millward, Paul Widdop, Neil King & Anthony May, 1-5 Articles • Austerity, policy and sport participation in England, by Paul Widdop, Neil King, Daniel Parnell, David Cutts & Peter Millward, 7-24 • Emerging third-sector sports organisations and navigating uncertainty in an ‘era of austerity’: a single ethnographic case study from Liverpool, by James Andrew Kenyon, Carolynne Mason & Joel Rookwood, 25-42 • An analysis of third sector sport organisations in an era of ‘super-austerity’, by Catherine M. Walker & John W. Hayton, 43-61 • The organizational performance of national disability sport organisations during a time of austerity: a resource dependence theory perspective, by Christopher Brown & Athanasios (Sakis) Pappous, 63-78 • Public management of sports facilities in times of austerity, by Evald Bundgaard Iversen, 79-94 • The performance of local authority sports facilities in England during a period of recession and austerity, by Girish Ramchandani, Simon Shibli & Shia Ping Kung, 95-111 • Managing budget cuts in Edinburgh’s sport and recreation services: progressive localism in a resilient local authority, by Gavin Reid, 113-129 • From welfare state to participation society? Austerity measures and local sport policy in the Netherlands, by Remco Hoekman, Jan-Willem van der Roest & Hugo van der Poel, 131-146 • ‘Adopt an athlete for Rio 2016’: the impact of austerity on the Greek elite sport system, by Dimitra Papadimitriou & Konstantinos Alexandris, 147-162 • ‘It’s just a Trojan horse for gentrification’: austerity and stadium-led regeneration, by Mark Panton & Geoff Walters, 163-183 Page - 4 - of 15 H-Sport Journal Watch. First Quarter 2018 • Is sport for development already an anarchronism in the age of austerity or can it be a space of hope?, by Tony Rossi & Ruth Jeanes, 185-201 • The impact of austerity on poverty and sport participation: mind the knowledge gap, by Reinhard Haudenhuyse, 203-213 International Review for the Sociology of Sport, 53, no. 1 (February 2018) http://journals.sagepub.com/toc/irsb/53/1 Editorial Essay • Learning from history and acting politically: The threats and opportunities facing the sociology of the sport community, by Dominic Malcolm, 3-10 Research Articles • Cultural citizenship, media and sport in contemporary Australia, by David Rowe, 11-29 • The politics of countermeasures against match-fixing in sport: A political sociology approach to policy instruments, by Minhyeok Tak, Michael P. Sam & Steven J. Jackson, 30-48 • Presenteeism in the elite sports workplace: The willingness to compete hurt among German elite handball and track

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    15 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us