A Social History of Swimming in England, 1800 – 1918: Splashing in the Serpentine

Front Cover
Christopher Love
Routledge, Oct 18, 2013 - History - 176 pages

Covering a time of great social and technological change, this history traces the development of the four classic aquatic disciplines of competitive swimming, diving, synchronized swimming and water polo, with its main focus on racing. Working from the beginnings of municipal recreational swimming, the book fully explores the links between swimming and other aspects of English life society including class, education, gender, municipal governance, sexuality and the Victorian invention of the sports amateur-professional divide.

Uniquely focused on swimming -often neglected in analytic sports histories- this is the first study of its kind and will be an important landmark in the establishment of swimming history as a topic of scholarly investigation.

This book was previously published as a special issue of the International Journal of the History of Sport.

 

Contents

Series Editors Foreword
1774
Introduction
1776
An Overview of the Development of Swimming in England c 17501918
1781
Swimming and Gender in the Victorian World
1801
Amateurs and Professionals
1820
The Municipal Provision of Swimming Pools in England 18281918
1838
Three Case Studies in Municipal Swimming Pool Provision
1849
Swimming at the Clarendon Schools
1863
State Schools Swimming and Physical Training
1875
Swimming Saving Life and the Rise of the Royal Life Saving Society
1890
Swimming Service to the Empire and BadenPowells Youth Movements
1907
Health Cleanliness and the Empire
1920
A Chronology of English Swimming 17471918
17
Index
22
Copyright

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About the author (2013)

Christopher Love is an independent Scholar.

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