The Field: Truth and Fiction in Sport History

Front Cover
Taylor & Francis, 2005 - Sports & Recreation - 342 pages
Girls series books have been popular since the early 1840s, when books about Cousin Lucy, a young girl who learns about the world around her, first appeared. Since then, scores of series books have followed, several of them highly successful, and featuring some of the most enduring characters in fiction, such as Nancy Drew. In recent decades, series books like The Baby-Sitters Club and Sweet Valley High have become staples for young readers everywhere.

In Sisters, Schoolgirls, and Sleuths: Girls' Series Books in America, Carolyn Carpan provides a social history of girls' series fiction published in America from the mid-19th century through the early 21st century. Carpan examines popular series, subgenres, themes, and characters found in approximately 100 series, noting how teenage girls are portrayed in girls' series fiction and how girls' series reflect or subvert the culture of the era in which they are produced. Her study also focuses on the creation, writing, and production of such books.

This is the first study of American girls' series books to examine the entire genre from its beginnings in the 1840s to the present day, revealing facts about a sub-genre of children's and young adult literature that has rarely been studied. Appendixes in this volume include a listing of the girls' series covered in the book as well as important books about girls' series fiction.
 

Contents

List of illustrations
1
An introduction to sport historiography
7
PART I
23
theory in sport history
43
presenting
62
sources evidence and traces
82
PART II
107
The contexts and functions of sporting myths
126
interpreting language and discourse
194
Epilogue
210
Politics and the purpose of history
217
38
266
50
272
888
278
Glossary
301
Select bibliography
307

explaining determinants in sport
143
explaining transformations
159
interpreting the big picture
178

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About the author (2005)

Douglas Booth is Professor of Sport and Leisure Studies at the University of Waikato, New Zealand. He serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Sport History, Sport History Review and The International Journal of the History of Sport. He is a well-known, respected and popular sport historian, with a high profile in Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and the USA. His book The Race Game: Politics and Sport in South Africa (Frank Cass) was awarded the 1998 North American Society for Sport History 'Book of the Year' award.

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