HIST 390 A - Sport and Society - Integration & American Sports
Campus: Urbana-Champaign
Description:
In various societies, organized sport has operated as site of nation-building, the struggle for inclusion, and indicator of societal advancement. Examines the history of the roles that sport has played in society through a series of topical foci, as selected by the professor each semester. Course readings revisit popular and scholarly debates about sport and discuss the different actors and social forces that shaped those discussions. Course Information: Same as KIN 345. May be repeated in separate terms to a maximum of 6 hours if topics vary.
Special Instructions:
Description: This course examines how sports, far from simple entertainment, can be a key towards understanding larger social and intellectual shifts. For example, what can one learn about the Civil Rights Movement through the prism of Jackie Robinson's major league debut- While this class will heavily focus on the modern era, beginning with the resuscitation of the Olympic Games in 1896, and often on the United States, there will be a strong grounding in a "long history" of athletics and society guaranteed to give students a comprehensive investigation of this topic. Course assignments and readings will give students a front row seat to some of the most important events, actors, and debates within this paradigm. Treating its subject from a rare perspective, anyone who takes this course will neer think about sports the same way again.
Option 1
Number of Required Visit(s): 0Course Level: Undergraduate
Credit: 3
Term(s): Fall