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The James Naismith Reader : Basketball in His Own Words

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James Naismith invented the game of basketball as a physical education instructor at the International YMCA Training School in Springfield, Massachusetts.

That December of 1891, his task was to create a game to occupy a rowdy class during the winter months.

Almost instantly popular, the game spread across the country and was played in fifteen countries by the end of the century. And yet basketball never had an overriding presence in Naismith’s life, as he was also a minister, doctor, educator, and coach. So what did Naismith think about the game of basketball?

In The James Naismith Reader, Douglas Stark answers that question using articles, speeches, letters, notes, radio interview transcripts, and other correspondence, including discussions on the game’s origins, Naismith’s childhood game duck on a rock in Canada, the changing rules, basketball as a representation of Muscular Christianity, and the physical education movement.

From Naismith’s original rules written in 1891 to an excerpt from the posthumous publication of his book Basketball: Its Origin and Development, Naismith’s writings range over a fifty-year period, showing his thoughts on the game’s invention and as the game evolved during his lifetime. The first volume to compile the existing primary sources of Naismith’s views on basketball, The James Naismith Reader reveals what its inventor thought of the game, as well as his interactions with educators and instructors who assisted the game’s growth.

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Product Details
University of Nebraska Press
1496219015 / 9781496219015
Paperback / softback
796.323
01/02/2021
United States
English
282 pages : illustrations
23 cm