CHOVANEC, Jan. Early sports match announcements in The Times in the 1860s. In CHINED IV, Helsinki, Finland. 2014.
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Basic information
Original name Early sports match announcements in The Times in the 1860s
Name in Czech Žánrové podoby oznámení o sportovních utkáních v britských Timesech v 60. letech 19. století
Authors CHOVANEC, Jan.
Edition CHINED IV, Helsinki, Finland, 2014.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Presentations at conferences
Field of Study 60200 6.2 Languages and Literature
Country of publisher Finland
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
Organization unit Faculty of Arts
Keywords (in Czech) historická pragmatika; fotbal; kriket; jazyk v médiích; žánr
Keywords in English historical pragmatics; football; cricket; language in the media; genre
Tags International impact, Reviewed
Changed by Changed by: prof. Mgr. Jan Chovanec, Ph.D., učo 463. Changed: 25/11/2016 12:24.
Abstract
As the analysis of data from the Times Digital Archives shows, the earliest match announcements of football matches were made in the form of letters to the editor, which contrasts with e.g. cricket match announcements that had been appearing in the form of adverts in the same newspaper since the 1780s. This fact seems to reflect the tentative emergence of football and its slow but gradual institutionalization, resulting from its shift from an obscure pastime to a popular spectator sport in the late Victorian era. The genre of the letters to the editor appears to have served a broader function than today – it was a communication forum where individual readers could communicate information to others via the editor, as well as engage in heated intellectual debates, e.g. about the need for rules to regulate the newly constituted sport of football.
Abstract (in Czech)
As the analysis of data from the Times Digital Archives shows, the earliest match announcements of football matches were made in the form of letters to the editor, which contrasts with e.g. cricket match announcements that had been appearing in the form of adverts in the same newspaper since the 1780s. This fact seems to reflect the tentative emergence of football and its slow but gradual institutionalization, resulting from its shift from an obscure pastime to a popular spectator sport in the late Victorian era. The genre of the letters to the editor appears to have served a broader function than today – it was a communication forum where individual readers could communicate information to others via the editor, as well as engage in heated intellectual debates, e.g. about the need for rules to regulate the newly constituted sport of football.
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