Abstract

This article examines the issues of sports violence, popular culture and deviance, specifically with respect to violence at soccer matches in Victorian England. The author argues that a more adequate perspective on these issues is provided by a theory of the “civilizing process,” which holds that there has been a long-term decline in the relationship between pleasure and the witnessing of violent acts. This civilizing process has been a central aspect of the development of modern sport. It also had an impact on the transformation of English society throughout the nineteenth century, as the more powerful middle class sought to regulate the expression of violence by the working class.

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