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How a Traveling English Soccer Club Helped Popularize the Sport

July 3, 2018

This story is re-posted from CSUN Today. Read the story in CSUN Today.

California State University, Northridge’s chris bolsmannChris Bolsmann, a kinesiology professor and South African sociologist, recently published a history of the Corinthians Football Club, a London-based soccer team from the 1880s through the 1930s, which is credited with popularizing the sport around the world.

“English Gentlemen and World Soccer: Corinthians, Amateurism and the Global Game,” written in collaboration with Dilwyn Porter, an emeritus professor at De Montfort University, and published by Routledge, ​tells the story of the English soccer team that traveled the world and helped spark interest in the game around the world.

“English Gentlemen and World Soccer: Corinthians, Amateurism and the Global Game,” written by CSUN professor Chris Bolsmann and Dilwyn Porter, an emeritus professor at De Montfort University, was recently published by Routledge.

“What inspired this book is that I was doing some research many years ago in South Africa,” Bolsmann said. “I was given a photo of an old soccer team, the Corinthians, and it got me interested in why they [were] in South Africa in the first place.”

The Corinthians were a “super club” comprised of top-notch amateur talent that sparked the sport’s popularity in Britain and then toured the world, including Europe, South Africa, Canada, the United States and Brazil. The players were the self-proclaimed standard bearers for gentlemanly values in sport. They inspired teams, including the most popular club team in Brazil, Sport Club Corinthians Paulista in Saõ Paulo.

book cover reads english gentlemen and world soccerWhile much has been written about the Corinthians, mainly by club insiders, Bolsmann and Porter’s work is the first complete scholarly history to cover their activities in England and in other parts of the world. It examines the club’s role in the development of soccer and fills a gap in existing literature on the relationship between the progress of the game in England and globally. The book also re-examines the sporting ideology of “gentlemanly amateurism” within the context of late-19th century and early-20th century society.

It took several years to complete “English Gentlemen and World Soccer” because of the extensive research needed around the globe.

“[Porter and I] decided which themes of the book we’re interested in,” Bolsmann said. “I traveled to access different archives from [places such as] the British Library and The National Archives in London. I [also] visited South Africa to  consult archives and newspapers, and went to Buenos Aires, São Paulo and Philadelphia also looking at newspaper archives. We’ve been working on this for a few years, and I’m very proud of our work. This is groundbreaking work in our specific field of sports history.”

This story is re-posted from CSUN Today. Read the story in CSUN Today.

Su 2018

Jan Palma, Jacob Bennett, Carmen Ramos Chandler, CSUN Today