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Our Hunting Fathers Professor Richard W. Hoyle

Our Hunting Fathers By Professor Richard W. Hoyle

Our Hunting Fathers by Professor Richard W. Hoyle


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Summary

Deals with the nature of various aspects of 'field sports' in England, from fox hunting and hare coursing, to angling, otter hunting and wildfowling. This history book discusses the involvement and participation of royalty, industrial plutocrats, the middle classes and even the working classes in sports.

Our Hunting Fathers Summary

Our Hunting Fathers: Field Sports in England After 1850 by Professor Richard W. Hoyle

In recent years field sports - hunting, shooting and fishing - have become one of the most hotly contested of pastimes in Britain. Shooting, hunting and even angling are now regarded as morally dubious or abhorrent; indeed, hunting with hounds in its classic form and hare coursing have recently been banned in Britain. Yet for an older generation hunting, whether foxes, hares or deer, or shooting pheasant, grouse or partridge, were quintessentially English activities which the rich exercised and to which the middle classes aspired. But if one separates moral and political emotion from historical reality, what do we actually know about the history of field sports? How did their practice evolve? What effect did their pursuit have on the countryside? Who were the people who committed so much time, money and enthusiasm to the pursuit of animals and birds? Surprisingly, perhaps, this book is the first attempt to offer a proper historical perspective on the subject of field sports in England. Ranging widely through a variety of distinct sports dedicated to the pursuit of all sorts of wildlife, from foxes, deer, hares and otters to game birds, wildfowl and salmon, it discusses the involvement and participation of royalty, industrial plutocrats, the middle classes and even the working classes in sports. In a series of readable and accessible essays, handsomely illustrated, the authors, each expert in their subject, make a case for the study of sports by historians, showing how their history impinges on the history of the countryside and environment, as well as on broader currents in the modern social history of England.

About Professor Richard W. Hoyle

The editor, Richard Hoyle is Professor of Rural History at the University of Reading. He serves as editor of Agricultural History Review. He was a British Academy Research Fellow in 2004-6.

Table of Contents

Preface xiii 1 Introduction: field sports as history by R.W.Hoyle 1 2 Royalty and the diversity of field sports, c.1840-c.1981, by R.W.Hoyle 41 3 Sport and the survival of landed society in late Victorian Suffolk, by Edward Bujak 72 4 The shooting party: the associational cultures of rural and urban elites in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, by Mark Rothery 96 5 Wildfowling: its evolution as a sporting activity, by John Martin 119 6 'A delightful sport with peculiar claims': the specificities of otter hunting, 1850-1939, by Daniel Allen 143 7 Science, sport and the otter, 1945-1978, by Charles Watkins, David Matless and Paul Merchant 165 8 The development of salmon angling in the nineteenth century. by Harvey Osborne 187 9 Starting a hare: exploring the history of coursing since the mid-nineteenth century, by Ian Roberts 212 10 Foxhunting and the Yeomanry: county identity and military culture, by Nicholas Mansfield 241 11 The fortunes of English foxhunting in the twentieth century: the case of the Oakley Hunt, by R.W.Hoyle 257 Notes and references 286 List of contributors 315 Index 317

Additional information

GOR005785228
9781859361573
1859361579
Our Hunting Fathers: Field Sports in England After 1850 by Professor Richard W. Hoyle
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Carnegie Publishing Ltd
2007-05-10
336
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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