Description

Book Synopsis
Sport and British Jewry provides the first wide-ranging examination of the importance of sport in the history of the British-Jewish community. Covering the period from 1890 through to 1970, it examines the peak era of Jewish involvement and interest in sport and physical recreation in Britain in recent times.

Trade Review

This is an important piece of social and cultural history and of interest to anyone interested in British identity, Jewish studies, sports studies and the role of ethnicity and racism in the modern world. The ground covered is impressive – it reflects both the world of immigrant and elite British Jewry and responses to the Jews from all layers of British society. The remarkable stories of Harold Abrahams and other Jewish sporting heroes are juxtaposed with ordinary experiences in the setting of a world of golf club and other prejudices.


David Dee’s engaging Sport and British Jewry: Integration, ethnicity and anti-Semitism, 1890–1970 is the best and clearest account of one of the missing links in the history of British Jewry, the role that Jews, like other minorities, played in the history of sport. More than in any other nation Britain is the home of sport as a civilizing factor (from football to rugby to boxing to racing) and the importance of Jews in the sporting world from Victoria to Elizabeth II is explored in Dee’s detailed and readable book.

David Dee has written a remarkable book about a fascinating subject. For too long scholars and the public alike have simply dismissed the notion of 'Jews and sport in the UK' as an oxymoron. Dee shows, with depth and insight, how significant and complicated this phenomenon was, and his study brilliantly illuminates Anglo-Jewry in a refreshing light.

-- .

Table of Contents

Introduction
PART I – Integration and ‘Anglicisation'
I. ‘Anglicisation’ through sport: The Jewish youth movement, 1895-1914
II. Competitive sport and immigrant integration, 1899-1939
III. ‘Too Semitic’ or ‘thoroughly Anglicised’? The life and career of Harold Abrahams
PART II – Religion and Ethnicity
I. ‘All on the side of the more athletic form of Sabbatarianism’ - Physical recreation and the Jewish Sabbath
II. The ‘new’ golden age of Jewish professional boxing
III. Creating a ‘new Jew’? Sport and Maccabi Great Britain, 1934-1970
PART III – Anti-Semitism
I. The British Union of Fascists and the ‘sporting Jew’, 1935-1939
II. ‘There is no discrimination here, but the committee never elects Jews’: anti-Semitism and Golf
III. Kicking discrimination into touch? Sport as a response to anti-Semitism
Conclusion
Bibliography

Sport and British Jewry Integration Ethnicity and

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    A Paperback by David Dee

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      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 11/30/2014 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780719096570, 978-0719096570
      ISBN10: 071909657X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Sport and British Jewry provides the first wide-ranging examination of the importance of sport in the history of the British-Jewish community. Covering the period from 1890 through to 1970, it examines the peak era of Jewish involvement and interest in sport and physical recreation in Britain in recent times.

      Trade Review

      This is an important piece of social and cultural history and of interest to anyone interested in British identity, Jewish studies, sports studies and the role of ethnicity and racism in the modern world. The ground covered is impressive – it reflects both the world of immigrant and elite British Jewry and responses to the Jews from all layers of British society. The remarkable stories of Harold Abrahams and other Jewish sporting heroes are juxtaposed with ordinary experiences in the setting of a world of golf club and other prejudices.


      David Dee’s engaging Sport and British Jewry: Integration, ethnicity and anti-Semitism, 1890–1970 is the best and clearest account of one of the missing links in the history of British Jewry, the role that Jews, like other minorities, played in the history of sport. More than in any other nation Britain is the home of sport as a civilizing factor (from football to rugby to boxing to racing) and the importance of Jews in the sporting world from Victoria to Elizabeth II is explored in Dee’s detailed and readable book.

      David Dee has written a remarkable book about a fascinating subject. For too long scholars and the public alike have simply dismissed the notion of 'Jews and sport in the UK' as an oxymoron. Dee shows, with depth and insight, how significant and complicated this phenomenon was, and his study brilliantly illuminates Anglo-Jewry in a refreshing light.

      -- .

      Table of Contents

      Introduction
      PART I – Integration and ‘Anglicisation'
      I. ‘Anglicisation’ through sport: The Jewish youth movement, 1895-1914
      II. Competitive sport and immigrant integration, 1899-1939
      III. ‘Too Semitic’ or ‘thoroughly Anglicised’? The life and career of Harold Abrahams
      PART II – Religion and Ethnicity
      I. ‘All on the side of the more athletic form of Sabbatarianism’ - Physical recreation and the Jewish Sabbath
      II. The ‘new’ golden age of Jewish professional boxing
      III. Creating a ‘new Jew’? Sport and Maccabi Great Britain, 1934-1970
      PART III – Anti-Semitism
      I. The British Union of Fascists and the ‘sporting Jew’, 1935-1939
      II. ‘There is no discrimination here, but the committee never elects Jews’: anti-Semitism and Golf
      III. Kicking discrimination into touch? Sport as a response to anti-Semitism
      Conclusion
      Bibliography

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