The Roots of Football Hooliganism (RLE Sports Studies): An Historical and Sociological Study

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Routledge, Apr 24, 2014 - Sports & Recreation - 286 pages

This systematic historical and sociological study of the phenomenon of football hooliganism examines the history of crowd disorderliness at association football matches in Britain and assesses both popular and academic explanations of the problem. The authors’ study starts in the 1880s, when professional football first emerged in its modern form, charting the pre and inter-war periods and revealing that England’s World Cup triumph formed a watershed. The changing social composition of football crowds and the changing class structure of British society is discussed and the genesis of modern football hooliganism is explained by tracing it to the cultural conditions and circumstances which reproduce in young working-class males an interest in a publicly expressed aggressive masculine style.

 

Contents

Football hooliganism as a social phenomenon
1
a critical review of some theories
13
2 The football fever 1
32
3 The football fever 2
54
4 Football hooliganism and the working class before the First World War
74
5 An improving people?
91
6 Incorporation and English football crowds between the wars
108
7 Soccer marches to war
132
8 From the teds and the skins to the ICF
157
9 The social roots of aggressive masculinity
184
Conclusion Towards a developmental theory of football hooliganism
217
Postscript Heysel and after
246
Notes and references
250
Index
268
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