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Sanctioned Savagery
Sanctioned Savagery
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Sanctioned Savagery

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American football was a violent sport from its beginning as a college game in the 1870s and 1880s, in part because learning how to deal with the pain and violence, to take it, made men out of college boys. Michael Oriard, former NFL linebacker and professor emeritus of English, shows us that this fundamental belief persisted for more than a century, until signs of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) were found in Pittsburgh Steelers' center Mike Websters brain. Suddenly, the cost of taking it could mean long-term damage not just to the body but also to the brain. Without anyone knowing it, that risk had soared since the 1950s and 1960s, when the hardshell plastic helmet became the primary weapon for blocking and tackling, as taught by a new generation of college coaches, led by the University of Alabamas Bear Bryant.In this cultural history of football at nearly all levelshigh school, college, and proOriard traces the perennial tension between health and culture regarding football as reflected in what the public read in newspapers, magazines, and online. Through examining how we once felt and how we now feel about the game, Oriard challenges us to grapple with the possibility that football might be too violent, in an intolerable way.
Alaotsikko
A History of Violence in American Football
Kirjailija
Michael Oriard
ISBN
9781469690681
Kieli
englanti
Julkaisupäivä
9.9.2025
Formaatti
  • PDF - Adobe DRM
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