1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910793396303321

Autore

Hardy Stephen <1948->

Titolo

Hockey : a global history / / Stephen Hardy and Andrew C. Holman

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Champaign, Illinois : , : University of Illinois Press, , [2018]

©2018

ISBN

0-252-05094-0

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (434 pages)

Collana

Sport and Society

Disciplina

796.962

Soggetti

Hockey - History

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

Intro -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Part One: Early Games to 1877 -- 1. Searching for Hockey's History -- 2. Folk and Field Games -- 3. The Montreal Birthing: 1875-77 -- Part Two: A Game Becomes the Game, 1877-1920 -- 4. Global Capitalism and the World of Sport: 1877-1920 -- 5. Breakout in Canada: 1877-1900 -- 6. Alternative Games: 1880-1900 -- 7. Forecheck into America: 1890-1920 -- 8. What Game? Forging a Distinct Product: 1890-1920 -- 9. Whose Game? Class, Language, Race, Sex, and Nation -- 10. Across the Ponds: 1895-1920 -- Part Three: The Diverging World of Canada's Game, 1920-1971 -- 11. Hot Wars, Cold Wars, and Brand Wars -- 12. North American Core Brands: 1920-1945 -- 13. Diverging North American Brands: 1920-1945 -- 14. Teams and Leagues of Their Own: 1920-1945 -- 15. Europe, the LIHG, and Olympic Hockey: 1920-1945 -- 16. Strength Down Center-North American Brands: 1945-1971 -- 17. Cold Wars and International Ice: 1945-1971 -- 18. Postwar Brand Wars: 1945-1971 -- Part Four: The Rise of Corporate Hockey, 1972-2010 -- 19. The Old Order Disrupted: 1972 -- 20. Restructuring North America: 1972-1988 -- 21. Global Visions of Open Ice: 1972-1988 -- 22. The Game on the Ice: 1972-1988 -- 23. From Calgary to the KHL: 1989-2010 -- Epilogue: Back to the Future? -- Notes -- Index -- About the Authors.

Sommario/riassunto

"Until the 1990s, the bulk of hockey history was focused on the National Hockey League and its celebrities, was written by Canadians



for Canadians, and was not scholarly in either research methods or presentation. That has begun to change, but only slightly, as evidenced in the slew of breezy, triumphant books published this year as the NHL celebrates its centennial. Based on 25 years of research, this book re-centers hockey's story toward a North Atlantic panorama that unfolded over the last two centuries amid currents of global capitalism. Rather than assume the domination of one Canadian version of hockey, this project traces the history of convergence, divergence and reconvergence of a range of hockeys, via stories of people, organizations, venues, contests, equipment, coaching strategies, marketing schemes, and political campaigns. The story is organized around dates that emerged from primary sources on hockey: 1875, when a new version of the game appeared in Montreal and began to move with the broadening currents of global capitalism; 1920, when the Montreal version became THE Olympic version, both solidifying its international position and spawning separate brands that spoke to nationalist aspirations arising--especially in Europe--as global capitalism collapsed during world wars, a depression, and a cold war; 1972, when a Soviet-NHL Summit Series triggered a new era when national differences slowly evaporated in favor of an NHL-centered industry we call "corporate hockey," which grew amid global capitalism's return. In The Coolest Game, hockey is not just a mirror of developing economic-political-cultural systems. Instead, it is an active ingredient in making those systems"--