Article
Details
Citation
Reid IA (2013) Shinty, Nationalism and National Autonomy in Scotland, 1887-1928. International Journal of the History of Sport, 30 (17), pp. 2098-2114. https://doi.org/10.1080/09523367.2013.847434
Abstract
Studies of the relationships between sport and nationalism have often overlooked how different sports may depict alternative expressions of nationalism. This paper examines how social, cultural and political ideas associated with nationalism and national autonomy in Scotland touched the sport of shinty between 1887 and 1928. During this period, the transformation of shinty from a traditional folk game to a modern sport was consolidated within Scottish Highland society. The paper probes some of the ways that shinty was contoured by, and connected to wider social, cultural and political circumstances of the period. Three strands are considered in the analysis: (i) the place of shinty as a conduit for aspirations of national autonomy, (ii) the different expressions of nationalism in Scotland that oscillated on the landscape of culture and politics and (iii) the connections between shinty and Gaelic sports in Ireland, and the relationship with expressions of nationalism. The analysis is developed using the concepts of national autonomy and civil society. These conceptual components help to probe how shinty symbolised alternative aspirations and expressions of nationalism between 1887 and 1928.
Keywords
shinty; Celtic sports; nationalism; national autonomy; Scotland
Journal
International Journal of the History of Sport: Volume 30, Issue 17
Status | Published |
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Publication date | 31/12/2013 |
Publication date online | 20/12/2013 |
Date accepted by journal | 10/09/2013 |
URL | http://hdl.handle.net/1893/18206 |
Publisher | Taylor and Francis (Routledge) |
ISSN | 0952-3367 |
eISSN | 1743-9035 |