Sport and the Literary Imagination: Essays in history, literature, and sport

Sport and the Literary Imagination: Essays in history, literature, and sport

by Jeffrey Hill
Sport and the Literary Imagination: Essays in history, literature, and sport

Sport and the Literary Imagination: Essays in history, literature, and sport

by Jeffrey Hill

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Overview

The development of sport in the twentieth century has been examined from a variety of angles. Rarely, though, has the work of the creative writer been considered in detail. This book directs its attention to this neglected area, examining a selection of novels in which the subject of sport has featured prominently. It highlights the ways in which novelists in the second half of the twentieth century have approached sport, explained its place in society, and through the sporting subject constructed a critique of the historical circumstances in which their narrative is set. The study therefore seeks to complement the increasing body of work on the representation of sport through such media as film, television, and autobiography. It also brings a fresh dimension to the use made by historians of literary sources, suggesting that creative fiction can be far more valuable as historical evidence than has customarily been acknowledged.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783039107094
Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
Publication date: 11/22/2006
Edition description: 1ST
Pages: 216
Product dimensions: 8.66(w) x 5.91(h) x (d)

About the Author

The Author: Jeffrey Hill is currently Director of the International Centre for Sport History and Culture and Professor of Historical and Cultural Studies at De Montfort University in Leicester, UK. He previously worked at Nottingham Trent University, and still lives in Nottingham. He has been a Visiting Professor at Columbus State University, Georgia, USA, and joint editor of the journal Sport in History. His academic interests link the social and cultural history of leisure with questions of historiography.

Table of Contents

Contents: The Historicity of the Text: A Historian’s Reading – ‘Mean Drab Times’: Robin Jenkins’s The Thistle and the Grail – ‘Acting Big’: David Storey’s This Sporting Life – ‘You are up against mean, small-minded men’: Brian Glanville’s The Rise of Gerry Logan – Men, ‘A Boy’s Game’, and America: Richard Ford’s The Sportswriter and Philip Roth’s American Pastoral – ‘The Relentless Pain and Responsibility of Club Football’: Nick Hornby’s Fever Pitch – ‘I’ll Kill ’Em All’: Ring Lardner’s Midge Kelly – ‘A Perfected Model of an Imperfect World’: Thomas Keneally’s A Family Madness – ‘You Don’t Upset the Shaygets’: Howard Jacobson’s The Mighty Walzer.
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