The History of Sport in Britain, 1880-1914: Field sportsThis five volume set is a comprehensive collection of primary sources on sports in the late Victorian and Edwardian eras. At the beginning of the period few sports were regulated, but by the outbreak of the First World War organized sports had become an integral part of British cultural, social and economic life. Specialist Martin Polley has collected articles from a wide range of journals including "Blackwood's Magazine,"" Nineteenth Century," "Fortnightly Review" and "Contemporary Review," all of which reveal changing middle-class attitudes to sports. The five volumes cover the varieties of sports being promoted, sports and education, commercial and financial aspects, sports and animals and the globalization of sports through empire. |
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Table des matières
Clive PhillipsWolley An Anglers First of April | 89 |
W Bromley Davenport Foxhunting | 90 |
Richard Jefferies The Defence of Sport | 91 |
W S SetonKarr Our Game Laws | 92 |
T E Kebbel English Love of Sport | 93 |
Gerald Lascelles The Chase of the Wild Fallow Deer | 94 |
Anonymous The English Gentry extract 96 Anonymous Pampered Sport and Pheasant Rearing | 95 |
Geo Campion Grouse Shooting | 97 |
W Earl Hodgson Hope for the Trout Streams | 107 |
Coleridge The Chase of the Wild Red Stag on Exmoor | 108 |
W Broadfoot The Gentle Craft | 109 |
W Earl Hodgson FlyFishing | 110 |
A Buxton DryFly Fishing for Sea Trout? | 111 |
Criticism and Opposition 112 Harvey Carlisle On Moral Duty Towards Animals | 112 |
Florence Dixie The Horrors of Sport | 113 |
George Greenwood The Ethics of Field Sports | 114 |
Gerald Lascelles Sport in the New Forest | 98 |
A Son of the Marshes Chance Shots and Odd Fish | 99 |
John Bickerdyke A New Sport | 100 |
Tom Speedy DeerStalking Search for a Royal | 101 |
Anonymous My First Kill | 102 |
W Payne Collier Otter Hunting? | 103 |
W B Woodgate Capping in the Hunting Field | 104 |
G T Teasdale Buckell The Scotch Deer Forests | 105 |
Anonymous Foxhunting Old and | 106 |
Gilfrid W Hartley The Future of FieldSports | 115 |
H S Salt Cruel Sports | 116 |
H A Bryden Hunting and its Future | 117 |
Anonymous The Survival and Destruction of British Animals extract | 118 |
W J Stillman A Plea for Wild Animals | 119 |
Sir Herbert Maxwell Our Obligations to Wild Animals | 120 |
Janey Sevilla Campbell Our Brothers the Beasts | 121 |
Vernon Lee Wasteful Pleasures | 122 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
angler animals appear become better birds bring called carried cause chase close comes course cover creatures cruelty deer dogs doubt early England existence fact farmers feeling field fish follow forest further give ground grouse half hand head hook horse hounds hour human hundred hunting interest keep killed kind land least leave less light live look Lord master means meet mind nature never once pack pain passed perhaps persons pheasants pleasure possible practice present preservation probably question reach rise river salmon season seems seen shooting shot side sport sportsman stag stream suffering taken thing thought trout turn whole wild wind wood young