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This edited volume proposes to revisit the development of recreational and professional sporting activities in the French capital between 1854 and 2024. It comprises fifteen chapters surveying the rich and multifaceted history of athletic practices in Paris, and constitutes the first comprehensive piece of scholarship exclusively dedicated to the relationship between sport, history, and culture in the City of Light.
This collection articulates and emphasizes the sustained presence and impact of sports in Parisian lives for over a century and a half, at the same time as it encourages readers
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Produktbeschreibung
This edited volume proposes to revisit the development of recreational and professional sporting activities in the French capital between 1854 and 2024. It comprises fifteen chapters surveying the rich and multifaceted history of athletic practices in Paris, and constitutes the first comprehensive piece of scholarship exclusively dedicated to the relationship between sport, history, and culture in the City of Light.

This collection articulates and emphasizes the sustained presence and impact of sports in Parisian lives for over a century and a half, at the same time as it encourages readers to think about sports as a form of cultural expression able to alter national, regional, and individual identity, in other words, as a form of entertainment able to shift our perception of leisure and spectatorship, an activity able to transform urban spaces and social norms. To this end, Sport in Paris proposes complementary perspectives, by not only addressing multiple sporting disciplines (tennis, football, boxing, etc.) but also stressing interdisciplinary approaches (history of the press, urbanism, health studies, literary geography, etc.).

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Autorenporträt
Maxence P. Leconte is Assistant Professor of French Studies and head of the French Studies program at Trinity University, San Antonio. His research primarily investigates the interplay between the rise of organized sports and modernity, as he contends that their combined influence acted as an agent of change that transformed society's perception of the role played by corporeality (including its relation to gender, race and class) during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries in France, Europe and the Americas. His most recent publications, discussing themes as varied as sport and classic French cinema, sport and the history of graphic novels, or sport and transmedia storytelling, have appeared in many peer-reviewed journals.