Sport and Sociology

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A01=Dominic Malcolm
academic subdiscipline development
athlete celebrity culture
athletes
Author_Dominic Malcolm
black
Black Athletes
body
Caribbean Cricket Club
Category=JHBS
Category=SCX
Contemporary Societies
Darwin's Athletes
Darwin’s Athletes
dunning
education
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
eq_sports-fitness
eric
Female Bodybuilders
Feminist Cultural Studies
Figurational Sociology
football
Football Hooliganism
gender dynamics research
histories
hooliganism
ICSS
IOC
IOC's Policy
IOC’s Policy
Mansfield
Mansfield
National Basketball Association
Persona
physical
Physical Educators
Pop Stars
Public Engagement
public engagement scholarship
Public Intellectual Work
race and sport studies
social theory analysis
sociological impact of sport research
Sociological Subdisciplines
Sports Historians
Ta Ge
UK Sociology
USA
Vice Versa
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415571210
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Dec 2011
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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  • How has our understanding of sport been shaped by sociological ideas?
  • How can the study of sport help sociologists to understand wider society?

The sociology of sport is a sub-discipline approaching maturity. This is the first book to stand back and reflect upon the subject’s growth, to trace its developmental phases and to take stock of the current fund of knowledge. It offers a ‘state of the art’ review of the sociology of sport and investigates those areas where sport has come to influence the sociological mainstream. The book also examines how the sociology of sport has attempted to engage with a popular readership, and what the consequences of such engagement have been.

Focusing on touchstone issues and concepts within sociological discourse such as race, gender, celebrity, the body and social theory, the book assesses the successes and failures of the sociology of sport in influencing the parent discipline, related sub-disciplines and the wider public. It also asks to what extent the sociology of sport can be said to be autonomous, distinctive and distinguished, and challenges students of sport to extend their work out of the narrow confines of the subdiscipline and across disciplinary divides.

As the first book to provide a history of the sociology of sport and to clearly locate the contemporary discipline in the wider currents of sociological discourse, this is important reading for all students and scholars interested in the relationship between sport and society, whether they are working in sport studies or in the sociological mainstream.

Dominic Malcolm is Senior Lecturer in the Sociology of Sport at Loughborough University. His main research themes are the socio-historical study of cricket, and the sociology of sports medicine.

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