Kathleen Bachynski is an assistant professor of public health at Muhlenberg College. She researches and teaches on topics in sports safety, epidemiology, public health ethics, and the history of sports and medicine. She is the author of No Game for Boys to Play: The History of Youth Football and
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work examines how retouching, manipulation, and the arrangement of photomechanical images provided readers in Europe and North America vicarious experiences of major sports events. Ramir Williams is a doctoral student in the Human Performance Program at Indiana University School of Public Health
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Theory (2001); Experiencing Sport: Reversal Theory (1999); Motivation and Emotion in Sport (1997); Understanding Soccer Hooliganism (1994). He is a former high level rugby player and coach. Jörg Krieger is a sport historian and associate professor in the Department of Public Health at Aarhus
The International Anti-doping Movement and the Council of Europe: An Unexamined Influence
Emmanuel Macedo
perspective, including education, public health, and, eventually, sport. Its vision was to create a system that cultivated generations of European citizens versed in the moral values associated with democracy and rule of law, including fairness and tolerance. They envisioned culturally literate and respectful
Too Rough for Bare Heads: The Adoption of Helmets and Masks in North American Ice Hockey, 1959–79
Kathleen E. Bachynski
Amateur Hockey Association (CAHA; now Hockey Canada). The paper will also briefly address how headgear debates in North American hockey’s major professional league, the NHL, both affected and were influenced by developments at the amateur level. Physicians and public health researchers have largely hailed
Unsettling Sporting Stories
Matthew Klugman
, Darlene Rotumah, and Elizabeth Rix, “BlackLivesMatter in Healthcare: Racism and Implications for Health Inequity among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples in Australia,” International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 9 (2021): 4399. 21. As an anonymous reviewer noted
Synchronized Swimming in Ontario, 1920–50s: Gender, Beauty, and Sport
Matthew S. Wiseman and Jane Nicholas
, symmetry, uniformity, strength, and beauty, not only as individual ideals but also as politicized ideals of the nation. 68 Concern over public health, eugenics, and physical fitness placed new emphasis on physical fitness for body and nation. Mass demonstrations allegedly showed the best bodies and the
Philippe Tissié’s Psychopedagogical Conceptions of Physical Education: Franco-Swedish Hybridity (1886–1935)
Pierre-Alban Lebecq, Yves Moralès, Jean Saint-Martin, Yves Travaillot, and Natalia Bazoge
, Tissié deduced that Swedish gymnastics contributed to straightening the spinal cord by expanding and developing the rib cage through systematically working extensor muscles. These were the ultimate goals of public health officials and orthopedists, which interested him most. The Franco-Swedish hybridity
Les activités physiques et sportives dans les institutions juives françaises durant l’Entre-deux-guerres (1918–1939) : un éclectisme de pratiques et d’objectifs
Etienne Pénard, Doriane Gomet, and Michaël Attali
Public Health (1868–1954) », Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports 23, no. 2 (2013): 232–43. 52. Michel, « L’action médico-sociale de l’OSE à Paris ». 53. Laurence Rosengart, « Les maisons de l’OSE : parcours d’une enfance fragmentée », in Au secours des enfants du siècle , dir. Martine
Retouched and Remarkable: Female Athletes in La Culture Physique (1904) as Historical and Visual Documentation
Rachel Ozerkevich
photomechanical images of bodies from only one disciplinary perspective would be to neglect how deeply intertwined these images were, and are, in physical culture and sports history, discourses of public health, international relations, bodily and gender norms, media history, modernity, and, less subtly, with