Sportsmen and Gamesmen

John Dizikes author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of Missouri Press

Published:30th Sep '02

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

Sportsmen and Gamesmen cover

The gradual transformation of the aristocratic sporting tradition of Britain into a popular one in America is the theme of this work. John Dizikes defines the distinction between gamesmen and sportsmen as the regard in which each held the rules. He begins by reviewing the sporting life and career of the personification of American democracy, Andrew Jackson. For Jackson, the total sportsman, the code of conduct was a vital part of any game. The next generation of Americans had less respect for these codes of honour inherited from Britain. For them, codes of honourable behaviour became irrelevant, almost un-American. Among the many sporting figures whose lives Dizikes covers, the readers encounter many of the self-contradicting attitudes of 19th-century Americans in the process of creating a uniquely American sporting culture.

It's a pleasure to meet some of the less familiar sporting and gaming figures that Mr. Dizikes introduces in his volume.... Not only do these figures give [him] the chance to wheel out lively anecdotes about once-famous, now-forgotten horse races, boxing matches, sailing tests and other contests, but they also allow him to explore obscure corners of popular history. - New York Times; ""Dizikes displays broad knowledge of a subject that crosses several different sports, generations, and cultures.... [He is] an inspiring writer who approaches the subject with vigor and a strong sense of direction. His book admirably makes the connection between sport and society at large, and, in so doing, should provide interesting and thought-provoking reading for a wide range of American historians."" - American Historical Review; ""Dizikes uses a collection of biographical vignettes on various individuals, such as John Cox Stevens, Richard Ten Broeck, and Hiram Woodruff, to explore his themes. Sports historians will be familiar with most of the people examined, but Dizikes makes us more aware of their contributions to nineteenth-century sport than can currently be gleened from historical studies."" - Journal of Sport History; ""This scholarly but very readable study is almost certain to get attention.... Sports fans are sure to delight in the book's final chapter, which wryly sums up the evolutions of American attitudes on the playing field."" - St. Louis Post-Dispatch; ""Our history as a sports-minded culture is scholarly and entertainingly depicted in John Dizikes' Sportsmen and Gamesmen, which assesses the emergence of sports in the 19th century from the time of Andrew Jackson to the turn of the century.... [His] writing is clear and full of insights into American sport, both then and now, and, along the way, he retells some great stories about men (and some women) and horses and the games we play."" - Philadelphia Inquirer

ISBN: 9780826214478

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 333g

368 pages