Faculty of Health Sciences

School of Kinesiology

The University of Western Ontario

Kin 263 F

Canadian Sport History - Fall 2005

 

Dr Don Morrow                                                              Tues 1:30-2:45 # 3250 3M Ctre

Dr Don Morrow                                                 Tues 10-11:50 #3101 ThamesSouth Valley Building  # 338; phone: 661-4128          Thurs 1:30-2:45  # 3250 3M Ctre

Office Hours: by appointment

e-mail: donmor@uwo.ca

 

Course Website:  http://instruct.uwo.ca/kinesiology/263f/ Use UWO login & password

 

Course Textbook: Morrow, Don & Wamsley, Kevin B. Sport in Canada: A History. Toronto: Oxford University Press, 2005.

 

Course Content: The purpose of this course is to provide an overview of issues and

topics related to the history of sport in Canada. Using the forces of class, gender, and race

as an interpretive basis, the course will examine sport in New France, British North

America, Post-Confederation Canada, and the 20th century.

 

Course Objectives:

~ to provide an historical overview of Canadian sport history;

~ to provide opportunities for the discussion of pertinent issues;

~ to develop a critical awareness of historical problems related to sport in Canada;

~ to provide an opportunity to develop research and writing skills through an essay assignment.

 

Course Evaluation:

 

1.Mid-term, in class examination (some short answer, at least one essay-style question) Thursday Oct 20th  30% 

2.Research Paper; Due: Tuesday November 15th 40%

3.Final Examination (same format as mid-term, not cumulative): TBA 30%

 

Course Schedule and Readings : *** Unless otherwise indicated, readings are from the course textbook by Morrow & Wamsley *** The source “Reserve (ICOS)” means on reserve at the International Centre for Olympic Studies located on the 3rd floor of the South Valley Building.

 

Week 1 - Introduction, Studying History, Sport, and Culture

Readings: Morrow and Wamsley - “Introduction”

 

 

Week 2 - Sport in Early Canada - Natives, Colonists

Readings: Morrow and Wamsley – “Games and Contests in Early Canada”

Week 3 - British North America - Clubs, the Military, and Social Class

Readings: Morrow and Wamsley – “Games, Pastimes, and Sporting Life in British North America”

Week 4 – Industrialization & the Growth of Organized Sport

Readings: Morrow and Wamsley – “Transitions to Organized Sport in the Nineteenth Century”

Week 5 - Montreal: The Cradle of Canadian Competitive Sport

Readings: Morrow and Wamsley – “Control of Sport: The Amateur Ideal and Professionalism”

Week 6 – Organizing Sport in Canada: The New Masculinity

Readings: Morrow - “The Knights of the Snowshoe” Reserve (ICOS)

Morrow and Wamsley - “Case Studies in the Growth and Institutionalization of Sport: Lacrosse and Baseball”

Week 7 – The Hero and Canadian Sporting Icon

Readings: Morrow and Wamsley- “Stars and Heroes: Hanlan, Rubenstein, Cyr, and Scott”

Week 8 – Women, Sport and Exercise

Readings: Morrow and Wamsley – “Gender, Body, Sport”

Week 9 - Selling Manhood: Violent Sport and Amateurism

Readings: Wamsley and Whitson - “Celebrating Violent Masculinities” Reserve (ICOS)

Morrow and Wamsley – “Sport and the National”

Week 10 - Internationalism & the Early Olympic Games

Readings: Morrow and Wamsley – “The Olympic Games”

Week 11 – Feminizing Women’s Sport – Ideals, Olympics, Examples

Readings: Hall - “Sweetheart Heroines” Reserve (ICOS)

Week 12 – Professionalism, Hockey and Government Involvement in 20th Century Canadian Sport

Readings: Gruneau and Whitson - “The Making of Early Professional Hockey” Reserve (ICOS)

Morrow and Wamsley – “Physical Education in Canadian Schools and Universities”

 

 

*** Please note that you are responsible for ensuring that you have successfully completed all course prerequisites, and that you have not taken an anti-requisite course.  Lack of a prerequisite or the completion of an anti-requisite cannot be used as a basis for appeal. If you are found ineligible for a course, you may be removed from it at any time and you will not receive and adjustment to your fees. This decision cannot be appealed. ***