Introduction
Ch 1 Land of Liberty
Ch 2 'Bonny Moor Hen'
Ch 3 Bottom
Ch 4 Custom
Ch 5 Home
Ch 6 New Moral Worlds
Ch 7 Bloods
Ch 8 Moderns
Conclusion
Robert Colls is Professor of History at the International Centre
for Sports History and Culture at De Montfort University,
Leicester. He was born in South Shields, where he first played
football on a disused colliery waggon-way. Much of his academic
career has been based in Leicester, which is also where he played
his last game of football in the local Sunday League. When it
became clear that he couldn't play again, he knew that something
trivial and yet hugely
important had changed for him. He is the author of the acclaimed
George Orwell: English Rebel, published by Oxford University Press
in 2013.
a highly original, personal yet deeply accomplished, history of
sporting pastimes
*Mike Huggins, Cultural and Social History*
This is an idiosyncratic work that is full of erudition and wit,
being highly informative and often very entertaining ... a valuable
addition to libraries specializing in modern British history or the
history of sport.
*M. Klobas, CHOICE*
A compelling, evocative and unique explication of what sport has
meant to the English.
*Aberdare Literary Prize *
Simultaneously insightful, beguiling and accomplished...it's not
about the slow development of sporting rules and governing bodies.
None of that matters. It is a tour de force account of how the love
affair with liberty had a profound influence on the English and
their sports.
*Mike Huggins, Cultural and Social History*
Eccentric, erudite and often very funny... [a] dazzling history of
sport in England... Every page is a delight.
*Dominic Sandbrook, The Sunday Times, Best History Books of the
Year 2020*
Robert Colls has taken on 200 years of English history through the
prism of its culturally neglected sports - common, exclusive,
innovative, brutal. He's written a definitive work not only of our
sporting life, but also of our social texture.
*Melvyn Bragg, New Statesman, Books of the Year 2020*
Robert Colls's exploration of sport in England between 1760 and
1960 is like no sporting history I have ever read... Eccentric,
dazzlingly learned and often very funny... Colls is a historian of
matchless insight and admirably democratic range.
*Dominic Sandbrook, The Sunday Times*
This Sporting Life displays exhausting quantities of erudition...
The prose is lively even in the footnotes... there are jewels on
every page... There is more life in these pages than can be
explained, or needs to be.
*Simon Kuper, Financial Times*
Superb... This is much more than a history of sport; it is really
an alternative history of England itself... This book is full of
moments that pull you up short and make you think.
*Alex Massie, The Spectator*
Colls has combined painstaking research with elegant prose to
produce a thoroughly readable history of British sports and
pastimes over two hundred years. In doing so he has breathed new
life into an often-neglected corner of British history.
*Emma Griffin, Literary Review*
[A] quirky and strikingly original social history of England
through its sports, games and pastimes... beautifully and
inventively expressed, witty and bawdy in places... perhaps the
most impressive element of This Sporting Life is its light touch,
the way it never quite loses sight of the fact that at its heart,
sport is fun.
*Jonathan Liew, New Statesman*
A remarkably and admirably human history, full of empathy for
people of all classes and condescension towards none... Crackling
on the page, Colls's prose elucidates and amuses in equal measure
and with equal sharpness.
*Stephanie Barczewski, Times Literary Supplement*
strongly recommended contribution to the history of the
emotions
*Daniele Serapiglia, Passato e Presente*
thought-provoking...readable...valuable...novel..intuitive..
excellent example of how a topic can be revitalised by thinking
creatively...
*Dave Day, idrottsforum*
A monograph of monumental importance...placing sport at the
forefront of civil culture in Britain. A work of national and
international importance that should provide a platform for similar
studies in other countries.
*Keith Laybourn, Labour History Review*
I'd like to say something about style. Colls is a master. He can
be--in turn--witty, slapstick comic, ironic, satirical, sarcastic,
lyrical, sombre, or elegiac. Sometimes he's Robert Surtees and
sometimes he's John Milton. Mostly, I think, he's Pierce Egan.
Whatever the tone, he's a marvel at the epigram.
*Allen Guttmann, author of From Ritual to Record. The Nature of
Modern Sports*
At heart this book is the best kind of social history: vivid,
revelatory and penned by an author who seems to know the byways of
every county in England... a joyous book of dazzling
scholarship.
*Dan Jackson, History Today*
This is both a vivid and thought-provoking read... I would
recommend the book to anyone skeptical of the historical
significance of sport.
*Lincoln Allison, The Critic*
[This Sporting Life] is absorbing, original, and entertaining...
Colls is a formidable historian of England and English identity
*Simon Heffer, New Criterion*
An exemplary work and one that illuminates with stories rather than
numbing with statistics... Colls' previous work, in particular
'Identity of England' (2002) and 'George Orwell: English Rebel'
(2013), established his credentials as a historian on a mission to
restore the experiences of the working-classes to the national
record - the Jack Tars, pitmen and pugilists - but to do so through
hard evidence not special pleading... Nowhere is this better
realised than in his final chapter on football.
*John Mitchinson, Byline Times*
It is when Colls rises to the challenge of his subtitle - 'Sport
and Liberty' - that the book really soars.
*John Mitchinson, Byline Times*
A great read for anyone who loves sport... free of jargon and and
full of what people actually did... The writing is full of
memorable phrases, wry comments and thoughtful insights into human
behaviour... a message that could have been penned by George Orwell
himself.
*Philip Cottam, The Arbuturian*
This fascinating and engagingly written book is about much more
than sport: customs, tradition, place, identity, national myths as
well as national stories all have their place. Colls has written
the best book I have read on George Orwell, and this book too is
definitive.
*Jason Cowley, Editor of The New Statesman*
The two most successful and positive exports from this country are
the English language and organized sport. The profound influence of
sport has been grievously unacknowledged. In his new book, Robert
Colls puts this right by bringing its history to life and linking
it quite brilliantly with common notions of liberty, patriotism,
and belonging. He also shows the part modern sport played in
replacing the many textures of our traditional patterns of social
life. It's vivid, passionate, and goes to the heart of a subject
which in so many ways is now the dominating conversation in
peoples' lives.
*Melvyn Bragg, Broadcaster*
A brilliant book by one of my favourite British historians...giving
the real thrill of first hand research and covering every corner of
our national life. Even if you don't like sport you will like this
book.
*John Mitchinson, Backlisted Podcast*
This is a wonderful book. It is engrossing,beautifully written,
overflowing with insight into England and English ideas of liberty
as manifest through sport.It is a history of sport unlike any other
and is nothing short of exhilarating.
*Paul Rouse, School of History, University College Dublin*
Sparkling and scholarly, Robert Colls' new history of sport is
expertly set within the wider context of English society and
culture. Abounding with fresh insights, sport is celebrated and
explained from Regency prize-fights to Wembley Cup Finals;
vibrantly written, full of dramatic incidents and exceptional
individuals.
*Richard Holt, author of Sport and the British: A Modern History*
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