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Carrick-on-Shannon, Co. Leitrim: Carrick Print. Devlin, P. J. (1934). Our native games. Dublin: M. H. Gill & Sons. Dolan, P. (2005). The development of consumer culture, subjectivity and national identity in Ireland, 1900–1980. PhD thesis, Goldsmiths College, University of London, London. Dolan, P. (2009a). Developing consumer subjectivity in Ireland: 1900–1980. Journal of Consumer Culture, 9(1), 117–141. Dolan, P. (2009b). Figurational dynamics and parliamentary discourses of living standards in Ireland. British Journal of Sociology, 60(4), 721–739. Dolan, P. (2018). Class relations and the development of boxing: Norbert Elias on sportisation processes in England and France. In J. Haut, P. Dolan, D. Reicher, & R. Sánchez García (Eds.), Excitement processes: Norbert Elias’s unpublished works on sports, leisure, body, culture (pp. 235–254). Wiesbaden: Springer. Dolan, P., & Connolly, J. (2009). The civilizing of hurling in Ireland. Sport in Society, 12(2), 196–211. Dolan, P., & Connolly, J. (2014a). Documents and detachment in the figurational sociology of sport. Empiria, 30, 33–52. Dolan, P., & Connolly, J. (2014b). Emotions, violence and social belonging: An Eliasian analysis of sports spectatorship. Sociology, 48(2), 284–299. Dunning, E. (1989). A response to R. J. Robinson’s “The ‘civilizing process’: Some remarks on Elias’s social history”. Sociology, 23(2), 299–307. Dunning, E. (1994a). The social roots of football hooliganism: A reply to the crit- ics of the ‘Leicester School’. In R. Giulianotti, N. Bonney, & M. Hepworth (Eds.), Football violence and social identity (pp. 128–157). London: Routledge. Dunning, E. (1994b). Sport in space and time: “Civilizing processes”, trajectories of state-formation and the development of modern sport. International Review for the Sociology of Sport, 29(4), 331–347. BIBLIOGRAPHY 195 Dunning, E. (1999). Sport matters: Sociological studies of sport, violence and civili- zation. London: Routledge. Dunning, E. (2008a). The dynamics of modern sport: Notes on achievement-­ striving and the social significance of sport. In N. Elias & E. Dunning (Eds.), Quest for excitement: Sport and leisure in the civilising process (Rev. ed., pp. 203–221). Dublin: University College Dublin Press. Dunning, E. (2008b). Social bonding and violence in sport. In N. Elias & E. Dunning (Eds.), Quest for excitement: Sport and leisure in the civilising pro- cess (Rev. ed., pp. 222–241). Dublin: University College Dublin Press. Dunning, E., & Maguire, J. (1996). Process-sociological notes on sport, gender relations and violence control. International Review for Sociology of Sport, 31(1), 295–318. Dunning, E., Murphy, P., & Waddington, I. (2002). Towards a global programme of research into fighting and disorder at football. In E. Dunning, P. Murphy, I. Waddington, & A. Astrinakis (Eds.), Fighting fans: Football hooliganism as a world phenomenon (pp. 218–224). Dublin: University College Dublin Press. 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