Watching football in marvellous Melbourne : spectators, barrackers and working class rituals


Autoria(s): Pennings, Mark W.; Pascoe, Robert
Data(s)

01/05/2011

Resumo

A study of crowds drawn to Australian football matches in colonial Victoria illuminates key aspects of the code's genesis, development and popularity. Australian football was codified by a middle-class elite that, as in Britain, created forms of mass entertainment that were consistent with the kind of industrial capitalist society they were attempting to organise. But the 'lower orders' were inculcated with traditional British folkways in matters of popular amusement, and introduced a style of 'barracking' for this new code that resisted the hegemony of the elite football administrators. By the end of the colonial period Australian football was firmly entrenched as a site of contestation between plebeian and bourgeois codes of spectating that reflected the social and ethnic diversity of the clubs making up the Victorian competition. Australian football thereby offers a classic vignette in the larger history of 'resistance through ritual'.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/46878/

Publicador

The Australian Society for Sports History

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/46878/1/46878.pdf

http://www.sporthistory.org/Publications.html#ST

Pennings, Mark W. & Pascoe, Robert (2011) Watching football in marvellous Melbourne : spectators, barrackers and working class rituals. Sporting Traditions. Journal of the Australian Society for Sports History, 28(1), pp. 1-20.

Direitos

Copyright 2011 please consult authors

Fonte

Art & Design; Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #210303 Australian History (excl. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander History) #Australian football #sport spectators #Colonial Victoria
Tipo

Journal Article