The problem of pleasure : sport, recreation and the crisis of Victorian religion

Bibliographic Information

The problem of pleasure : sport, recreation and the crisis of Victorian religion

Dominic Erdozain

(Studies in modern British religious history, v. 22)

Boydell Press, 2010

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 283-294) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The book combines intellectual, cultural and social history to address a major area of encounter between Christianity and British culture: the world of leisure. This book traces the rise and fall of the evangelical movement, the powerhouse of Victorian religion, via its preoccupation with pleasure. Victorian evangelicalism demonstrated an ability to excite the affections but also a corresponding suspicion of worldly pleasures. Suspicion developed into hostility, and a movement premised on freedom became coercive and alienating. The crisis of Victorian religion began. It is generally held that the mid-Victorian turn to recreation and sport solved the problem, 'justifying God to the people' through cricket, cycling and football. This book argues otherwise - that the problem of pleasure was inflamed by the ecclesiastical remedy. The problem of overdrawn boundaries between church and world gave way to a new and subtle confusion of gospel and culture. Historians have praised the mood of engagement but the costs were profound. In fact, sport became the perfect vehicle for that humanistic, 'unmystical' morality that defines the secularity of the twentieth century. Secularisation did not wait for the Dionysian rebellions of the 1960s: it emerged - almost a hundred years earlier - in the Victorian transformation of religion into ethics. Central to the process was the problem of pleasure. DOMINIC ERDOZAIN is Lecturer in the History of Christianity, King's College London

Table of Contents

Introduction 'Born Free and Everywhere in Chains': Evangelicalism and the Problem of Pleasure Romanticism with Boots On: The Virtues of Sport Negotiating the Secular: the Coming of Recreation to the mid-Victorian Religious World 'We Are All Cyclists Now': Applying the Pleasure Principle Sport and the Secularisation of late-Victorian Youth Ministry Contesting the Sacred: the late-Victorian Church and the 'Gospel of Amusement'

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