Four Histories about Early Dutch Football, 1910–1920
Nicholas Piercey
History
Four Histories about Early Dutch Football, 1910–1920
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Contents
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What is the purpose of history today, and how can sporting research help us understand the world around us? In this stimulating book, Nicholas Piercey constructs four new histories of early Dutch football, exploring urban change, club members, the media, and the diaries of Cornelis Johannes Karel van Aalst, a stadium director, to propose practical examples of how history can become an important democratic tool for the 21st century.

Using early Dutch football as a field for experimental thinking about the past, the four histories offer new insights into the lives, interests and passions of those connected to the sport in the 1910s and the cities they lived in. How did World War One impact on Dutch football? Were new stadia a form of social control? Is the spread of the beautiful game really a good thing? And why was one of the sport’s most prominent figures more concerned with potatoes? These stories of early Dutch football suggest how vital sport and history can be in shaping our lives, perceptions and actions, and why we need to challenge the influence they have today.

Language
English
ISBN
9781910634790
Cover
Half-title
Title page
Copyright information
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Table of contents
List of figures and tables
List of abbreviations
List of clubs
A note on images
Street names and organisations
1 Constructing research
The postmodern
The past and history
The archive and history
The problems of language in history
Narrative, style and history
Places and modes of production
The historian and history
Discourses
Sport, early Dutch football and the four histories
2 Constructing grounds
Urban change in Amsterdam and Rotterdam
Spaces for football in 1910 Amsterdam and Rotterdam
Stadium crisis in Amsterdam
Rotterdam innovations
Finance
Order and civilisation in the new functional stadium
Other sporting spaces
Summary: the rise of the new functional stadia
3 Constructing narratives
An imagined journey in Rotterdam somewhere between 1 August 1914 and 7 August 1914
The telegraph office, 31 July 1914
The southern Stadsdriehoek
The northern Stadsdriehoek
Noordereiland
The south
Stationswijk
West Coolsingel
The west and the park
Crooswijk
The north
The east
Further afield
London, December 2015
4 Constructing football discourses
The press and sport
Discipline, efficiency and time
Training and schools
The match as exam: constructing the sportsman
The sportsman as amateur
Administering order and regulation
Committees, infringements and punishment
Surveillance: the referee, the fans and the media
Constructing identities through football
Similarities and differences
Sport today
5 Constructing history
Van Aalst and sport
Trade and business
Belgian refugees in Amsterdam, October 1914
The arrest of Kick Schröder
Amsterdam rebels: summer 1917
New openings
Epilogue
London, The Hague and Amsterdam, 2016
Notes
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
References
Books, journals, articles
Public archival resources
Rotterdam, Stadsarchief Rotterdam (SAR)
SAR, Archive 257: Rotterdamse Voetbal- en Atletiek Vereeniging Sparta.
SAR, Archive 256: Sportclub Feyenoord
SAR Fotocollectie
The Hague, Nationaal Archief (NA)
Uncatalogued private archival resources
Newspaper articles and sporting magazines archive
Online resources
Defunct websites
Appendix
Index
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