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Sports training, science and class among British amateur athletes in the mid to late nineteenth century

conference contribution
posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00 authored by Peter Mewett
Organised amateur sports emerged in the second half of the nineteenth century. This paper, an exercise in historical sociology, analyses how a new system of sports training was devised by the amateurs to meet their particular needs. The data comes from contemporary British training manuals and the analysis is informed by the theories of Bourdieu and Foucault. That amateurs came from the higher social classes was highly
significant: it meant that they could not adopt existing training practices because these were associated with plebeian professional athletes. For amateurs to have followed the preparation of the professionals would have placed their bodies under the control of a social inferior and promoted a somatic shape more in keeping with the lower than with
the higher social orders. Mirroring the social distance between them, amateurs came to stridently reject professional training practices. Instead, they devised new training techniques which were justified through recourse to contemporary bio-medical knowledge. It is argued that amateur training originated for social reasons, with the proponents’ class positions and social capital facilitating the evocation of scientific knowledge as a legitimating ideology.

History

Event

Australian Sociological Association. Conference (2006 : University of Western Australia & Murdoch University)

Pagination

1 - 10

Publisher

Australian Sociological Association

Location

Perth Western Australia

Place of publication

St Lucia, Qld.

Start date

2006-12-04

End date

2006-12-07

ISBN-13

9781740521390

Language

eng

Publication classification

E1 Full written paper - refereed

Editor/Contributor(s)

J Northcote

Title of proceedings

TASA 2006, Sociology for a mobile world : conference proceedings of The Australian Sociological Association 2006 Conference

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