{"title":"后记","authors":"M. Huggins, Mike O’Mahony","doi":"10.1080/09523367.2011.567783","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"On 6 August 1967, the Sunday Express published a cartoon by its regular contributor, Giles (Figure 1). It represents a group of visitors at a museum, attending to a uniformed guard who adopts an oratorical stance while expounding on the virtues of one of the many works displayed on the walls of these ornate surroundings. One of the museum visitors, however, has chosen to ignore this official commentary, listening instead to a sports commentary delivered on the small transistor radio he holds to his ear. Billions of these popular cultural artefacts were sold globally during the 1960s, and became a common sight at sports grounds, as owners listened to commentary and results elsewhere. Here it is specifically a football match that captures the museum visitor’s attention far more than the surrounding art, as the radio commentator announces, as articulated in the accompanying caption, ‘Greaves passes to Gilzean, Gilzean to Greaves, Greaves puts the ball across to Mackay, brilliant header by Chalmers . . .’. The inclusion in the commentary of the names of well-known players – Jimmy Greaves, Alan Gilzean and Dave Mackay of Tottenham Hotspur and Steve Chalmers of Celtic – enables a precise identification of the match being played. On the previous day these two teams had met at Hampden Park in Glasgow in a pre-season friendly; Tottenham appeared as FA Cup victors (having recently beaten Chelsea 2–1) and Celtic as the first British team to bring home the European Cup (having defeated Inter Milan 2–1 in Portugal). This careful staging of a match between the winners of the so-called ‘Cockney Cup Final’ and the ‘Lisbon Lions’ was clearly designed to reflect the current strength of British football, and stand on the shoulders of England’s famous victory in the World Cup the previous summer. It also reflected an increasing media attention devoted to football, not least of all an expansion of television coverage. For example, the BBC’s flagship football programme Match of the Day had first been broadcast just three years earlier in 1964 and live coverage of big games in the FA Cup, the European Cup and the World Cup was increasingly becoming the norm. Football, along with other forms of mass entertainment such as pop music, was changing the face of British culture. In this context, Giles’s cartoon notably highlights the transgressive potential of popular culture when it invades a notionally more highbrow environment, such as","PeriodicalId":47491,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of the History of Sport","volume":"28 1","pages":"1370 - 1374"},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2011-05-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1080/09523367.2011.567783","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Epilogue\",\"authors\":\"M. Huggins, Mike O’Mahony\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/09523367.2011.567783\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"On 6 August 1967, the Sunday Express published a cartoon by its regular contributor, Giles (Figure 1). It represents a group of visitors at a museum, attending to a uniformed guard who adopts an oratorical stance while expounding on the virtues of one of the many works displayed on the walls of these ornate surroundings. One of the museum visitors, however, has chosen to ignore this official commentary, listening instead to a sports commentary delivered on the small transistor radio he holds to his ear. Billions of these popular cultural artefacts were sold globally during the 1960s, and became a common sight at sports grounds, as owners listened to commentary and results elsewhere. Here it is specifically a football match that captures the museum visitor’s attention far more than the surrounding art, as the radio commentator announces, as articulated in the accompanying caption, ‘Greaves passes to Gilzean, Gilzean to Greaves, Greaves puts the ball across to Mackay, brilliant header by Chalmers . . .’. The inclusion in the commentary of the names of well-known players – Jimmy Greaves, Alan Gilzean and Dave Mackay of Tottenham Hotspur and Steve Chalmers of Celtic – enables a precise identification of the match being played. On the previous day these two teams had met at Hampden Park in Glasgow in a pre-season friendly; Tottenham appeared as FA Cup victors (having recently beaten Chelsea 2–1) and Celtic as the first British team to bring home the European Cup (having defeated Inter Milan 2–1 in Portugal). This careful staging of a match between the winners of the so-called ‘Cockney Cup Final’ and the ‘Lisbon Lions’ was clearly designed to reflect the current strength of British football, and stand on the shoulders of England’s famous victory in the World Cup the previous summer. It also reflected an increasing media attention devoted to football, not least of all an expansion of television coverage. For example, the BBC’s flagship football programme Match of the Day had first been broadcast just three years earlier in 1964 and live coverage of big games in the FA Cup, the European Cup and the World Cup was increasingly becoming the norm. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
1967年8月6日,《星期日快报》刊登了一幅由其定期撰稿人贾尔斯(Giles)创作的漫画(图1)。漫画描绘了一群游客在博物馆里,看着一名身穿制服的警卫,这名警卫以雄辩的姿态,阐述着这些华丽环境中墙上展示的众多作品中的一件作品的优点。然而,博物馆的一位参观者却选择无视官方的解说,而是听着他耳边的小晶体管收音机里传来的体育解说。在20世纪60年代,数十亿件这种流行的文化文物在全球范围内被出售,当所有者在其他地方听评论和结果时,它们成为体育场上的一道常见风景线。在这里,这是一场足球比赛,比周围的艺术品更能吸引博物馆游客的注意力,正如电台评论员所宣布的那样,正如附带的标题所表达的那样,“格里夫斯传给吉尔赞,吉尔赞传给格里夫斯,格里夫斯把球传给麦凯,查默斯的头球精彩……”在解说中加入了一些知名球员的名字——热刺的吉米·格里夫斯、艾伦·吉尔兹、戴夫·麦凯和凯尔特人的史蒂夫·查尔默斯——这使得人们能够准确地识别正在进行的比赛。就在前一天,这两支球队在格拉斯哥的汉普顿公园球场进行了季前赛的友谊赛。托特纳姆热刺是足总杯冠军(最近以2比1击败切尔西),凯尔特人是第一支将欧洲冠军杯带回家的英国球队(在葡萄牙以2比1击败国际米兰)。这场精心安排的所谓“伦敦杯决赛”获胜者与“里斯本雄狮”之间的比赛,显然是为了反映英国足球目前的实力,并站在英格兰在去年夏天世界杯上著名胜利的肩膀上。这也反映了媒体对足球的关注越来越多,尤其是电视报道的扩大。例如,英国广播公司(BBC)的旗舰足球节目《每日一赛》(Match of the Day)在三年前的1964年首次播出,对足总杯、欧洲杯和世界杯等大型比赛的现场直播正日益成为常态。足球和流行音乐等其他大众娱乐形式一起改变了英国文化的面貌。在这种背景下,贾尔斯的漫画突出了流行文化的越界潜力,当它侵入一个理论上更高雅的环境时,比如
On 6 August 1967, the Sunday Express published a cartoon by its regular contributor, Giles (Figure 1). It represents a group of visitors at a museum, attending to a uniformed guard who adopts an oratorical stance while expounding on the virtues of one of the many works displayed on the walls of these ornate surroundings. One of the museum visitors, however, has chosen to ignore this official commentary, listening instead to a sports commentary delivered on the small transistor radio he holds to his ear. Billions of these popular cultural artefacts were sold globally during the 1960s, and became a common sight at sports grounds, as owners listened to commentary and results elsewhere. Here it is specifically a football match that captures the museum visitor’s attention far more than the surrounding art, as the radio commentator announces, as articulated in the accompanying caption, ‘Greaves passes to Gilzean, Gilzean to Greaves, Greaves puts the ball across to Mackay, brilliant header by Chalmers . . .’. The inclusion in the commentary of the names of well-known players – Jimmy Greaves, Alan Gilzean and Dave Mackay of Tottenham Hotspur and Steve Chalmers of Celtic – enables a precise identification of the match being played. On the previous day these two teams had met at Hampden Park in Glasgow in a pre-season friendly; Tottenham appeared as FA Cup victors (having recently beaten Chelsea 2–1) and Celtic as the first British team to bring home the European Cup (having defeated Inter Milan 2–1 in Portugal). This careful staging of a match between the winners of the so-called ‘Cockney Cup Final’ and the ‘Lisbon Lions’ was clearly designed to reflect the current strength of British football, and stand on the shoulders of England’s famous victory in the World Cup the previous summer. It also reflected an increasing media attention devoted to football, not least of all an expansion of television coverage. For example, the BBC’s flagship football programme Match of the Day had first been broadcast just three years earlier in 1964 and live coverage of big games in the FA Cup, the European Cup and the World Cup was increasingly becoming the norm. Football, along with other forms of mass entertainment such as pop music, was changing the face of British culture. In this context, Giles’s cartoon notably highlights the transgressive potential of popular culture when it invades a notionally more highbrow environment, such as