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Conférence Conférence Sport Recherche doctorale Sciences historiques

The view from Oregon street: An analysis of ethnic sport clubs and urban development in Rochester, NY 1880-1915

The Centre for Olympic Studies & the Globalisation of Sport of the University of Lausanne and its director Prof. Patrick Clastres are pleased to invite you to the eighth session of the webinar Building bridges within and outside the history of sport 2022-2023 with Alec Hurley, Doctor in sport studies at the University of Texas at Austin (USA) and Lecturer in Sport Management (Cardiff Metropolitan University, Wales) _____ La vue de la rue d'Oregon : Une analyse des clubs sportifs ethniques et du développement urbain à Rochester, NY 1880-1915 Le Centre d’études olympiques & de la globalisation du sport de l’Université de Lausanne et son directeur le Prof. Patrick Clastres ont le plaisir de vous inviter à la huitième séance du webinaire Building bridges within and outside the history of sport 2022-2023 avec Alec Hurley, Docteur en sciences du sport à l’Université du Texas à Austin (Etats-Unis) et Lecturer en gestion du sport (Cardiff Metropolitan University, Pays de Galles).

Publié le 27 avr. 2023
Lieu
Synathlon, En ligne
Format
Présentiel

This dissertation provides original contributions to the field of sport history at the nexus of place, space, and cultural identity. It brings together urban history, migration studies, and local community histories to understand cultural relationships in a dynamic and understudied city. Two questions for the foundation for this project. The first asks how the existing geography and urban layout framed the emergence of local sport and physical culture clubs. That inquiry naturally facilitated a follow-up question, namely: how, then, did the presence of ethnic sport and social clubs shape the physical and cultural evolution of the city? The development of sport and urban centers in metropolises across the United States, such as New York City, Chicago, Boston, and New Orleans, have been afforded substantial reams within sport literature. Literature on smaller industrial areas, which emerged concurrent with the advent of increased transportation networks across the Great Lakes in the form of canals and railways, has been comparatively light. Roy Rosenzweig addressed that concern in his work on the labor history of immigrants in Worchester, Massachusetts, when he claimed, “the evidence from one-medium sized city can only resolve these questions in tentative ways.” He did, however, provide a caveat that if reliable data could be elicited from comparable cities, scholars could draw grander conclusions about sport, immigration, and cultural synthesis across the Unted Staes. I argue that Rochester fits the requirements for Rosenzweig’s plea for a comparable city. Therefore, this work acts both as a continuation of prominent sport and urban historians (Reiss, Hardy, and Rosenzweig) and as a novel entry within sport studies.

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