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Games People Played

A Global History of Sport

Wray Vamplew

$34.99

Paperback

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English
Reaktion Books
01 November 2023
Games People Played is, surprisingly, the first global history of sport. The book shows how sport has been practiced, experienced and made meaningful by players and fans throughout history. It assesses how sports developed and diffused across the globe, as well as many other aspects, from emotion, discrimination and conviviality; politics, nationalism and protest; and how economics has turned sport into a huge consumer industry. It shows how sport is sociable and health-giving, and also contributes to charity, however it also examines its dark side: its impact on the environment, the use of performance-enhancing drugs, and match fixing.

Published during Summer Olympic year, covering everything from curling to baseball, boxing to motor racing, this book will appeal to anyone who plays, watches and enjoys sport, and wants to know more of its history and global impact

By:  
Imprint:   Reaktion Books
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
ISBN:   9781789147759
ISBN 10:   1789147751
Pages:   456
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Introduction: Pre-match Instructions PART ONE SPORTS HISTORY: FIRING BOTH BARRELS 1 Know the Score: Understanding Sports History 2 Walk the Walk: Practising Sports History PART TWO SPORT THROUGH THE AGES 3 Sport before the Industrial Age 4 The Industrial Age (and Slightly Beyond) 5 The Past Century or So PART THREE SPORTS 6 Fighting Talk: Combat Sports 7 The Killing Fields: Hunting, Shooting and Fishing 8 Horses for Courses: Equestrian Sports 9 Taking Speed: From Foot Power to Wheel Power 10 Out Clubbing: Bat and Ball Sports 11 Moving the Goalposts: The Football Codes 12 . . . Nor Any Drop to Drink: Water Sports 13 Slipping and Sliding: Winter Sports 14 Across the Pond: American Sports PART FOUR SPORTING LIFE: SOCIAL AND CULTURAL ASPECTS 15 Pushing the Mind and Body: Emotion, Pain and Violence 16 Open and Closed Doors: Discrimination in Sport 17 Playing Together: Sports Clubs and Associativity PART FIVE MIXING OIL AND WATER: SPORT, POLITICS AND POWER 18 Political Football: Nationalism, Propaganda and Protest 19 Human Rights (and Wrongs) 20 Running or Ruining the Game: Rules and Rule-makers PART SIX SHOW US THE MONEY: THE BUSINESS OF SPORT 21 Selling the Game: Sports Entrepreneurs and the Products They Marketed 22 Citius, Altius, Fortius et Multo Maiores: Mega Events 23 Playing for Pay: The Professional Athlete PART SEVEN THE GOOD, THE BAD AND THE UGLY: THE PUBLIC IMAGE OF SPORT 24 Charity Begins at Home . . . and Away 25 How Green Was my Volley: Sport and the Environment 26 Selling Out the Game: Match-fixing and Drug-taking Stoppage Time Recommended Reading Acknowledgements Photo Acknowledgements Index

Wray Vamplew is Emeritus Professor of Sports History at the University of Stirling and Global Professorial Fellow at the University of Edinburgh. His many books include How The Game Was Played: Essays In Sports History (2016) and he was a General Editor for the six-volume Cultural History of Sport (2021).

Reviews for Games People Played: A Global History of Sport

"'Games People Played is the culmination of a life spent working on the history of sports, and it ranges far and wide . . . Vamplew is as informative and comprehensive as one could want . . . An outstanding guide to [sports] role in history.' – David Papineau, Wall Street Journal; 'Wray Vamplew is among the first generation of British historians to have challenged and changed that, writing on, among other things, the history of horseracing, the history of professionalism, rural sports and sport’s relationship with alcohol and violence. Games People Played is no less omnivorous, offering, in miniature, a global history of sport, the history of the world’s leading sports and a historically informed, thematic survey of the best sociological, economic and political work on sport. It is, perhaps, best thought of as a summation not only of the author’s work, but that of a whole generation of historians, and demonstrates unequivocally that their work is neither marginal nor trivial. Indeed, it has become a necessary component of understanding our world.' – David Goldblatt, TLS; 'Wray Vamplew’s Games People Played is one of the smartest books written about sports. Not only does Vamplew detail the evolution of sports across cultures and countries, he thoughtfully discusses how sport historians do their jobs – sifting through documents, testing established myths, and searching for truth and meaning. For an American reader, conditioned by American sports, the book shows us how indebted we are to English and European sporting organizations. No one who reads the book will ever think of sports the same way.' – Randy Roberts, Distinguished Professor of History at Purdue University and author of A Team for America: The Army-Navy Game that Rallied a Nation (2011); 'Compendious . . . The book does have an underlying mission, which is to argue for sport to be taken seriously as an object of study. And it shows how deeply sport is embedded in culture . . . Games People Played . . . underlines that truism of applied history: to understand the present you need to know the past – in sport as in anything else. Cicero said that ""to be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child"". The study of games, Vamplew demonstrates, is very much for grown-ups.' – Sunday Times; 'Wray Vamplew’s book is a tour de force. It is for anyone who appreciates sport for what it is: at its best aspiring and inspirational, overcoming barriers of race, religion, colour, creed and politics and achieving adrenaline rushes of triumph and glory; at its worst, full of despair, heartache and pain, frustration, rejection and corruption. Games People Played is truly an enjoyable ""must have"" for any sports fan, and indeed a necessity.' – Gordon Taylor, OBE, Chief Executive of the Professional Footballers' Association; 'Academics typically undervalue the history of almost everything that's entertaining – food, dance, pop culture, fun. But these are activities that matter to people. And if you want to know how cultures differ, overlap, interweave and conflict, study their sports. That's what Wray Vamplew does, with insight, lucidity, scholarship and sympathy. For understanding the global past I'd rather recommend Games People Played than any book of conventional political, social or economic history.' – Felipe Fernández-Armesto, William P. Reynolds Professor in Arts and Letters, University of Notre Dame; 'In Games People Played, Professor Vamplew gives us his distillation of the entire sweep of global sports history, from ancient times to the present. It’s an enormous accomplishment, rich in argument, telling details, and the demolition of myth. “We have to bear in mind that what was history to us was life to them,” he writes. It’s an illuminating, enjoyable read for anyone who loves sports.' – Bruce Kidd, OC, Professor of Sport and Public Policy, University of Toronto; 'A finely woven overview of important themes in sports history. Illustrating how sports are impactful to human societies in positive and negative ways, Vamplew draws on global examples from Western nations, Ancient Greece, and Indigenous communities from Central America to the Middle East and South Asia. Vamplew writes about the experiences of sports from elite to lower classes, and these perspectives expand the interpretations of sports in history . . . Readers interested in the history of sports in global context and the historical scholarship of sports will find much to pore over, and help in understanding the sociology and economics of sports and the evolving relationship between sports and people: players, sports officials, and spectators.' – Booklist; 'Looking for a single volume coverage of anything and everything to do ith the story of sport in human history then this is the book for you . . . an extraordinary coverage of sport from seventh century BCE Abyssinia to the present day. It is a marvellous and accessible tour de force.' – The Footy Almanac; 'If there is one [narrative] to be extracted from Games People Played, it’s this: contrary to popular opinion, we may be living in sport’s golden age.' – The Spectator; 'This first global history of sports offers all spectators and participants reason to cheer – and to think.' – Campaign for the American Reader; 'for anyone seeking the widest coverage and the greatest accessibility and stimulation it sets the bar very high and, as with sport at its apogee, takes the breath away and leaves one marvelling at the performance. This review was written to draw attention to Games People Played quickly, but I will be learning from it for the next few years. It is something to be savoured, read and absorbed slowly, and argued about indefinitely . . . Vamplew covers an extraordinary range of issues and topics.' – Roy Hay, Sporting Traditions; 'an impressive book . . . Vamplew addresses a number of fundamental topics in sports history, such as discrimination, the role of sports clubs, nationalism in sport, human rights, sporting rules, mega-events, markets, commercialism, professionalism, cheating, doping, match-fixing and the (negative) environmental impact of sports . . . an ambitious, comprehensive and wide-ranging book on international sport history.' – Idrottsforum: Nordic Sport Science Forum; 'Wray Vamplew's Games People Played: A Global History Of Sport constitutes the fruits of half a century of research. It makes an unparalleled contribution to our understanding of sport and the role it has played in the history of the world. It is a tour de force which will be a standard work in sports history for many years to come. It combines an unbelievable breadth of topics and issues with a fine eye for detail and the oddball. Vamplew clearly works his way through issues in an engaging manner, utilising a nice ironic tone.', The Football Almanac; 'A delightfully quirky, unusually personal take on the history of sport around the world. Covering the history of global sport is an ambitious undertaking, but Vamplew gives it his all, exploring a commendable range of sports and a variety of sporting issues. Though he focuses more on Western sport, particularly sport in the US, Europe, and around the former British Empire, he does mention sport in Asia, the Middle East, Africa, South America, and other locales. Notably, Vamplew also calls for additional research on indigenous sport in a global context and sport for average people and those who have lost in sporting events . . . The text addresses a wide range of sporting controversies, drawing examples that range from political and sport business narratives to stories of drug issues and gambling activities, among many others. The book provides a fun overview of sport history, and the author's personal anecdotes amusingly reveal his perspectives and biases. This is an excellent introduction to the broad topic of global sport history. Highly recommended.' – Choice"


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