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Sport : antiquity and its legacy / Peter J. Miller.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Ancients and moderns seriesPublisher: London ; New York : Bloomsbury Academic, 2023Copyright date: ©2023Description: viii, 223 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type:
  • text
  • still image
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781350140219
  • 135014021X
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • GV573 .M55 2023
Contents:
Introduction : Which Ancient Sports? -- Chapter 1 : Sport in Greek Antiquity -- Chapter 2 : Sport in Roman Antiquity -- Chapter 3 : The Ancient and Modern Olympics -- Chapter 4 : Beauty, Strength, and Physical Culture -- Chapter 5 : Arenas, Stadiums, and Gyms -- Chapter 6 : Olympic Art and Cinema
Summary: Modern sport cannot be understood without ancient sport. Sport saturates contemporary society and the global reach of sport and its intense popularity characterizes the modern world. But, at the same time, sport is one of the most ancient human pursuits. In the globalized sport of today, the type of athletic performance and the ideology of sport and its apparent origins are mostly derived from the model of one pre-modern civilization: Graeco-Roman antiquity. Juxtaposing ancient writers with recent ones, including the modern Olympic founder Pierre de Coubertin and physical fitness impresario Bernarr Macfadden, and by examining the representation of sport in Olympic films, Miller demonstrates the ancient heritage of contemporary sport, and the creative ways in which ancient sport has been adapted, appropriated, mishandled and reimagined. Sport today contains a surprising contradiction: its explicit modernity (from its technological sophistication and integration into capitalist markets to its institutionalization and celebrity culture) and its supposed antiquity (from the mythology of the Olympics to the ancient roots of sporting civic and national pride, and the emotional and near religious fervour of sports fans). This book intervenes in one of the most important of the receptions of classical antiquity by examining how sports personalities, agencies, institutions and movements have consciously connected themselves to the Graeco-Roman past, even as they continue to insist on their own centrality in the modern world. -- Provided by publisher.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book University Library Regular Circulation Circulating GV573 M55 2023 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 3UPML00025618

MSSalazar (Recommending faculty) AY 2022-2023

Includes bibliographical references (pages 191-220) and index.

Introduction : Which Ancient Sports? -- Chapter 1 : Sport in Greek Antiquity -- Chapter 2 : Sport in Roman Antiquity -- Chapter 3 : The Ancient and Modern Olympics -- Chapter 4 : Beauty, Strength, and Physical Culture -- Chapter 5 : Arenas, Stadiums, and Gyms -- Chapter 6 : Olympic Art and Cinema

Modern sport cannot be understood without ancient sport. Sport saturates contemporary society and the global reach of sport and its intense popularity characterizes the modern world. But, at the same time, sport is one of the most ancient human pursuits. In the globalized sport of today, the type of athletic performance and the ideology of sport and its apparent origins are mostly derived from the model of one pre-modern civilization: Graeco-Roman antiquity. Juxtaposing ancient writers with recent ones, including the modern Olympic founder Pierre de Coubertin and physical fitness impresario Bernarr Macfadden, and by examining the representation of sport in Olympic films, Miller demonstrates the ancient heritage of contemporary sport, and the creative ways in which ancient sport has been adapted, appropriated, mishandled and reimagined. Sport today contains a surprising contradiction: its explicit modernity (from its technological sophistication and integration into capitalist markets to its institutionalization and celebrity culture) and its supposed antiquity (from the mythology of the Olympics to the ancient roots of sporting civic and national pride, and the emotional and near religious fervour of sports fans). This book intervenes in one of the most important of the receptions of classical antiquity by examining how sports personalities, agencies, institutions and movements have consciously connected themselves to the Graeco-Roman past, even as they continue to insist on their own centrality in the modern world. -- Provided by publisher.

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