Canadian sports

From Citizendium
Revision as of 22:13, 23 April 2008 by imported>Richard Jensen (new article)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Canadian sports attract numbers of participants and large audiences.

Bibliography[1]

  • Robidoux, Michael A. "Imagining a Canadian Identity through Sport: A Historical Interpretation of Lacrosse and Hockey" The Journal of American Folklore, Vol. 115, No. 456, Special Issue: Folklore in Canada (Spring, 2002), pp.209-225 in JSTOR
  • Morrow, D., & Wamsley, K.B. (2006). Sport In Canada: A History. Oxford University Press.
  • Howell, Colin D. (2001). Blood, Sweat, and Cheers: Sport and the Making of Modern Canada. Toronto: U of Toronto Press.
  • Kidd, Bruce. (1996). The Struggle For Canadian Sport. Toronto: Universityof Toronto Press.
  • Ballem, Charles, 'Missing From The Canadian Sport Scene: Native Athletes', Canadian Journal Of History Of Sport, 1983, 14(2): 33-39.
  • Booth, Bernard F. & Moss, I. (1989). Social and Moral Antecedents of Canadian Sport. Ottawa: University Of Ottawa Press.
  • Bouchier, Nancy, 'Canadian Sport History', Acadiensis, 1998, 28(1): 98-102.
  • Bouchier, N. 2003. For the love of the game: Amateur sport in small-town Ontario, 1838-1895. MQUP
  • Bray, Catherine, 'Sport and The Canadian State: Gender and Class Issues', Resources For Feminist Research, 1988, 17(3): 75-77.
  • Brown, D., 'The Northern Character Theme and Sport in Nineteenth Century Canada', Canadian Journal Of History Of Sport, 1989, 20(1), 47-56.
  • Burstyn, V. (1999). The Rites of Men: Manhood, Politics, and The Culture of Sport. Toronto: U of Toronto Press.
  • Coakley, Jay and Peter Donnelly, 2004. Sports in Society: Issues and Controversies, First Canadian Edition, McGraw-Hill Ryerson
  • Dauphinais, Paul R., 'A Class Act: French-Canadians In Organized Sport,

1840-1910', International Journal of The History Of Sport, 1992 7(3): 432-442.

  • Dallaire, Christine, 'Sport's Impact On The Francophoneness of the Alberta Francophone Games', Ethnologies, 2003, 25(2): 33-58.
  • Donnelly, Peter and Jean Harvey, 'Class and Gender: Intersections in Sport and Physical Activity' in Philip White and Kevin Young (eds), Sport and Gender in Canada, Oxford University Press, 1999, pp. 40-64.
  • Fisher, D.B. (2002). Lacrosse: A History of the Game. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore.
  • Gillespie, Greg, 'Sport and "Masculinities" In Early-Nineteenth-Century Ontario: The British Travellers' Image." Ontario History, 2002, 92(2), 113-26.
  • Gruneau, R. and D. Whitson, 1993. Hockey night in Canada: Sport, identities and cultural politics, Garamond.
  • Hall, M. Ann, 'Rarely Have We Asked Why: Reflections on Canadian Women's Experience in Sport', Atlantis, 1980, 6(1): 51-60.
  • Hall, M. A. (2002). The Girl and the Game: A History of Women's Sport in Canada. Peterborough, On: Broadview Press.
  • Harvey, Jean and H. Cantelon, 1988. Not just a game, U of Ottawa Press.
  • Hollan, Andrew C., 'Playing in the Neutral Zone: Meanings and uses of ice hockey in the Canada-U.S. Borderlands, 1895-1915', American Review Of Canadian Studies, 2004, 34(1).
  • Howell, C.D. (1995). Northern Sandlots: A Social History of Maritime Baseball. Toronto: U of Toronto Press.
  • Howell, Colin D. (2001). Blood, Sweat, and Cheers: Sport and the Making of Modern Canada. Toronto: U of Toronto Press.
  • Kidd, Bruce. (1996). The Struggle For Canadian Sport. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  • Lathrop, Anna H, 'Contested Terrain: Gender And "Movement" In Ontario Elementary Physical Education, 1940-70', Ontario History, 2002, 94(2): 165-182.
  • Lenskyj, Helen, 'Whose Sport? Whose Traditions? Canadian Women and Sport in the Twentieth Century', International Journal Of The History Of Sport, 1992, 9(1): 141-150.
  • Lenskyj, Helen, 'Common Sense and Physiology: North American Medical Views On Women and Sport, 1890-1930', Canadian Journal of History Of Sport, 1990,21(1): 49-64.
  • Macintosh, D. & Whitson, D. (1990). The Game Planners: Transforming Canada's Sport System. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press.

Macintosh, D., Bedecki, T., & Franks, C.E.S. (1987). Sport and Politics in Canada. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press.

  • Metcalfe, A. (1987). Canada Learns To Play: The Emergence of Organized Sport, 1807-1914. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart.
  • Metcalfe, A., 'Sports In Nineteenth-Century French Canada: The Case of Montreal, 1800-1914', Loisir et Societe/Society and Leisure, 1983: 105-120.
  • Metcalfe, Alan, 'The Meaning of Amateurism: A Case Study of Canadian Sport,1884-1970', Journal Of History Of Sport, 1995, 26(2): 33-48.
  • Morrow, Don, 'The Myth of the Hero in Canadian Sport History', Canadian Journal of History of Sport, 1992, (2): 72-83.
  • Mott, Morris, 'Perspectives on Sports and Urban Studies: Canadian Sports History: Some Comments To Urban Historians', Urban History Review, 1983, 12(2): 25-29.
  • Mott, M (ed) 1989. Sports in Canada: Historical Readings, Copp Clark Pittman.
  • Schrodt, Barbara, 'Problems of Periodization in Canadian Sport History', Canadian Journal of History of Sport, 1990, 21(1): 65-76.
  • Smith, Michael, 'Sport and Society: Towards a Synthetic History', Acadiensis, 1989, 18(2): 150-158.

See also

Online resources

notes

  1. Compiled by Eileen O'Connor, Assistant Professor School of Human Kinetics, University of Ottawa, and published on H-CANADA, April 23, 2008