© 2017 The British Society of Sports History. This article analyses the near-impossibility, for the duration of the amateur-professional divide, of cricketers born into working-class families being admitted to amateur status and, thus, to county captaincy, in the English first-class game. Its principal argument is that the hegemony achieved in the latter half of the nineteenth century by the English upper class (the aristocracy, major landowners and leaders of financial capital and their families) had one of its most visible manifestations in the culture of first-class cricket. The hegemony of this group (represented by the Marylebone Cricket Club) was sustained by a specific myth of amateurism that was rooted in caste-like social relations...
The chapter places the formative development of cricket during the eighteenth century within it's co...
It would appear that Darwin was onto something when he paraphrased Herbert Spencer’s “survival of th...
The Australian team that toured India in 1935/36 comprised atypical cricket personnel. Their cultura...
Cricket, Class and Colonialism examines the relationship between two elite cricket clubs (the Maryl...
By focusing largely upon the West Riding of Yorkshire and its contemporary local press, this paper e...
For Patrick Morrah, the 'golden age' of English cricket came at the dawn of the twentieth century, s...
This thesis takes the form of an analysis of the development over the last five hundred years of two...
The aim of this article is to understand how English cricket cultures have been made, negotiated and...
This paper offers an insight into the changing social and economic relations in cricket between 1860...
For Patrick Morrah, the ‘golden age’ of English cricket came at the dawn of the twentieth century, s...
As the title suggests there were many changes made to first-class cricket in England during the peri...
The under-theorised eighteenth-century game of cricket represents a far more fluid and paradoxical s...
The televising of cricket in Britain began in the pioneering days of broadcasting during the inter-W...
This study examines the rise and fall of the Savannah Cricket Club in 1859. It demonstrates that whi...
Although it has become a somewhat hackneyed way to start a paper on cricket, it remains almost impos...
The chapter places the formative development of cricket during the eighteenth century within it's co...
It would appear that Darwin was onto something when he paraphrased Herbert Spencer’s “survival of th...
The Australian team that toured India in 1935/36 comprised atypical cricket personnel. Their cultura...
Cricket, Class and Colonialism examines the relationship between two elite cricket clubs (the Maryl...
By focusing largely upon the West Riding of Yorkshire and its contemporary local press, this paper e...
For Patrick Morrah, the 'golden age' of English cricket came at the dawn of the twentieth century, s...
This thesis takes the form of an analysis of the development over the last five hundred years of two...
The aim of this article is to understand how English cricket cultures have been made, negotiated and...
This paper offers an insight into the changing social and economic relations in cricket between 1860...
For Patrick Morrah, the ‘golden age’ of English cricket came at the dawn of the twentieth century, s...
As the title suggests there were many changes made to first-class cricket in England during the peri...
The under-theorised eighteenth-century game of cricket represents a far more fluid and paradoxical s...
The televising of cricket in Britain began in the pioneering days of broadcasting during the inter-W...
This study examines the rise and fall of the Savannah Cricket Club in 1859. It demonstrates that whi...
Although it has become a somewhat hackneyed way to start a paper on cricket, it remains almost impos...
The chapter places the formative development of cricket during the eighteenth century within it's co...
It would appear that Darwin was onto something when he paraphrased Herbert Spencer’s “survival of th...
The Australian team that toured India in 1935/36 comprised atypical cricket personnel. Their cultura...