The Lady Footballers

The Lady Footballers

by James Lee
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date: 13/09/2013

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This book tells the story of ‘the Lady Footballers’. It covers their 1895 and 1896 tours through the eyes of the largely unsympathetic British press. It explains gender issues of the time, and the financial problems that doomed this experiment.


Despite increasing opportunities in sport for British women during the late nineteenth century, virtually every segment of society opposed the idea of women playing football. In 1895, Nettie Honeyball and Florence Dixie formed the British Ladies’ Football Club (BLFC) intending to introduce the game to women and girls as a means of recreation and profit, over 10,000 spectators crowded the football ground in London to watch the BLFC in its first match. Nearly every London newspaper covered the event.


These women endured public ridicule. They ignited the gender prejudice of the time, and confronted it head on wearing ‘men’s’ kit, and playing ‘men’s rules.’ Football's mystique was that it was a manly sport for men, thus these women footballers symbolized a paradox: those playing well were gender freaks; those not playing well proved it was a male game.


This book was published as a special issue of the International Journal of the History of Sport.

ISBN:
9781317996774
9781317996774
Category:
Sports & outdoor recreation
Format:
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date:
13-09-2013
Language:
English
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis
James Lee

After a successful career in advertising in Singapore, James Aitchison (as James Lee) turned to full-time writing for children in 1996.

The 200+ books in his ‘Mr Midnight’ and ‘Mr Mystery’ series have been translated into ten languages and have sold in excess of 3 million copies.

The Singapore Straits Times called him ‘Asia’s most popular children’s author’ and this success was recognised when he was awarded the inaugural 2013 Australian Arts in Asia Award for Literature.

His new series for children is called 'Ghostworks'. James returned permanently to Australia in 2010 and lives in Langwarrin, outside Melbourne.

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