Sport under Unexpected Circumstances
Violence, Discipline, and Leisure in Penal and Internment Camps
Contributor(s)
Feindt, Gregor (editor)
Hillbrenner, Anke (editor)
Dahlmann, Dittmar (editor)
Collection
Knowledge Unlatched (KU)Number
103603Language
EnglishAbstract
Sport was an integral part of life in camps during the twentieth century, even in Nazi concentrations camps or in the Soviet Gulag. Traditionally perceived as a symbol of equality, play, and peacefulness, sport under such unexpected circumstances irritates most observers, back then and today. This volume studies the irritating fact of sport in penal and internment camps as an important insight into the history of camps. The authors enquire into case studies of sport being played in different forms of camps around the globe and throughout the twentieth century. They challenge our understanding of camps, question the dichotomy of insiders and outsiders, inner-camp hierarchies, and the everyday experience of violence. This fresh perspective complements the existing camp studies and gives way for the subjectivity of camp inmates and their action.
Keywords
History; National Socialism; Sports; Concentration Camps; Humanities; History; Sports and Outdoor Recreation; HIS043000; HIS022000; Holocaust; JewishDOI
10.13109/9783666310522ISBN
9783666310522OCN
1082954049Publication date and place
2018Imprint
Vandenhoeck & RuprechtSeries
Veröffentlichungen des Instituts für Europäische Geschichte Mainz,Classification
The Holocaust
Second World War
Europe
c 1940 to c 1949