Drugs, Alcohol and Sport: A Critical History

Front Cover
Paul Dimeo
Routledge, Sep 13, 2013 - Sports & Recreation - 200 pages

The use of alcohol and drugs seems contradictory to the popular ideal of sport as a healthy moral and physical pursuit, and yet it has been present in sports culture since clubs first became the focus for competitive games and social gatherings. Charting the changing patterns of the use of drugs and alcohol since the nineteenth century, this is a critical history that relates substance consumption and regulation to social relations of power: sports men and women almost revelling in their deviance and leaving the moral agonising to their supposed ‘superiors’. In addition, certain substances have become at various times the focus of heightened controversy, raising questions about the symbolism of the body in sport, its uses and behaviours and associated perceptions. These questions are tackled here in a lively discussion on the social construction of drug and alcohol use, ideal as a catalyst for debate or as an informed introduction to the hottest topic in sport today.

This book was previously published as a special issue of Sport in History.

 

Contents

Tom Wills Alcohol and the Colonial Cricketer
1
2 Drink and the Professional Footballer in 1890s England and Ireland
22
An Anomalous Alliance
37
The Paradigm Shift in the Science of Training and the Use of PerformanceEnhancing Substances
59
5 Anabolic Steroid and Stimulant Use in North American Sport between 1850 and 1980
81
A Search for Truth?
99
7 Changing Patterns of Drug Use in British Sport from the 1960s
119
Patterns of Drug Use in European Cycling Since 1998
144
A Critique of AntiDoping
162
Index
183
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