1,720,995 research outputs found

    Integration i dansk kvindehåndbold. Slagelse FH og Aalborg DH som cases

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    Artiklen undersøger med udgangspunkt i Slagelse FH og Aalborg DH, klubbernes strategier for integration af udenlandske spillere.&#x0D;  &#x0D; Sine Agergaard and Line Vindbæk Andersen: Integration in Danish Women Handball. Slagelse and Aalborg handball clubs as cases</jats:p

    Dansk kvindehåndbold i medierne: Fra "jernhårde ladies" til småpiger

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    Sine Agergaard: Danish women’s handball and the media: from iron ladies to little girls The media have been interested in the Danish national women’s handball team since the beginning of the 1990s because the team has brought back international victories. However, an analysis of the two latest international sports events in women’s handball reveals a shift in the depiction of the Danish national team. At the European championships (Euro 2002), the media constructed a strong national sentiment that helped to support the Danish handball ladies, while at the World Cup in 2003, the same media produced ironical reports about the physically andmentally weak Danish handball girls. Using Wuthnow’s and Zeuner’s studies of the written, spoken and ritual contributions to discourses, this analysis compares one Danish newspaper’s and one TV-channel’s depiction of the two international sports events. In the first event, the media constructed a national community of discourse with written and spoken reports from Euro 2002 as a ritual course of events for the Danish handball ladies. In the second event, the media produced different national, physiological and psychological discourses to explain the defeated girls. The article also discusses the media’s tendency to focus on gender stereotypes when discussing top female athletes, such as masculine strength or feminine weakness instead of gender variety

    Fra forsamlingshuset over idrætshallen til multiaktivitetshuset

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    Analyse af tre bygninger i Vest- og Østjylland som billeder på den idrætshistoriske udvikling.From village hall to sports hall to multi-sports centre In this article, three sports facilities are depicted in order to gain insight into the development of the popular gymnastics and sports movement in Denmark. The author compares the history and present use of a village hall (built in 1891 and rebuilt in 1927), a sports hall (built in 1966), and a multi-sports centre (built in 2003). Using Tim Ingold’s concept of ‘taskscape’, the author shows the way in which those who live in a specific landscape incorporate the history of the building into their pattern of activities. It is argued that the popular gymnastics and sports movement has developed with different views of the population as a group. The formation of the population as a political unity (demos) is expressed in the creation of village halls. The further development of village halls and sports halls through the 20th century with their complex pattern of activities shows a development of the people as a cultural ethnos. Finally, the coaching of specific groups and individuals in the multi-sports centre points to a new development of</jats:p

    Introduction

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    Conclusion

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    Forord

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    Forordet indleder Idrætshistorisk Arbog 2007.</jats:p

    Transforming methodological nationalism

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    Rethinking programme techniques

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    Critiquing expectations of social capital in sports

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