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Playing at Monarchy

Sport as Metaphor in Nineteenth-Century France

Corry Cropper author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Nebraska Press

Published:1st Dec '08

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Playing at Monarchy cover

Looks at the ways sports are metaphorically used to defend and subvert both class and political power structures in nineteenth-century France

Looks at the ways sports and games are metaphorically used to defend and subvert, to praise and mock both class and political power structures in nineteenth-century France. This book examines what shaped these games of the nineteenth-century and how they appeared as allegory in French literature, newspapers, historical studies, and game manuals.For centuries sports have been used to mask or to uncover important social and political problems, and there is no better example of this than France during the nineteenth century, when it changed from monarchy to empire to republic. Prior to the French Revolution, sports and games were the exclusive domain of the nobility. The revolution, however, challenged the notion of noble privilege, and leisure activities began spreading to all levels of society. Games either evolved from Old Regime spectacles into bourgeois pastimes, such as hunting, or died out altogether, as did trictrac. During this period, sports and games became the symbolic cultural battlefield of an emerging modern state.
Playing at Monarchy looks at the ways sports and games (tennis, fencing, bullfighting, chess, trictrac, hunting, and the Olympics) are metaphorically used to defend and subvert, to praise and mock both class and political power structures in nineteenth-century France. Corry Cropper examines what shaped these games of the nineteenth-century and how they appeared as allegory in French literature (in the fiction of Balzac, Mérimée, and Flaubert), and in newspapers, historical studies, and even game manuals. Throughout, he shows how the representation of play in all types of literature mirrors the most important social and political rifts in postrevolutionary France, while also serving as propaganda for competing political agendas. Though its focus is on France, Playing at Monarchy hints at the way these nineteenth-century developments inform perceptions of sport even today.

"Anyone interested in French history or the social role of sports in Europe should find Playing at Monarchy well worth the time. Like Robert Darnton's The Great Cat Massacre, Cropper investigates historical 'ways of thinking' with wit and whimsy-in prose congenial to a twenty-first century American audience."-Alex Shakespeare, Sports Literature Association -- Alex Shakespeare Sports Literature Association "As fine in analysis as it is broad in scope, Cropper's book, which explores the intersection of sport, culture, history, and literature, represents interdisciplinary studies at their very best."-Hope Christiansen, French Review -- Hope Christiansen French Review

ISBN: 9780803217737

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 476g

272 pages