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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: C. Nathan HattonPublisher: University of Manitoba Press Imprint: University of Manitoba Press Dimensions: Width: 14.90cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 22.60cm Weight: 0.535kg ISBN: 9780887558009ISBN 10: 0887558003 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 30 April 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsThrashing Seasons is a great book. Hatton presents the history of wrestling in Manitoba in a readable, accessible style, but with all the footnotes and references that make the book a solid academic history. --Jim Blanchard Winnipeg Free Press Throughout Thrashing Seasons, Hatton's exploration of combat culture and prairie wrestling in Manitoba in the 19th and 20th centuries, there is a kind of deep cognitive refrain: why do people do this to each other? Hatton's research and writing moves in a series of wide circles around this idea, as he establishes the cultural context around the budding tradition of prairie wrestling. As he writes vivid accounts of the lives of several early wrestlers, he questions why they're compelled to combat. As it explores the social and cultural constructs that draws in audiences, he worries at the notions: why are people drawn to this sport? --Natalie Zina-Walschots THIS Magazine Generations of Canadians have grown up with pro wrestling. Some followed Stu Hart's Calgary-based Stampede Wrestling while others watched WWF (now WWE) matches, where legends like Hulk Hogan and 'Rowdy' Roddy Piper turned a pseudo-ballet into massively lucrative sports entertainment. But the sport's roots in Canada go far back, and cast a longer shadow than we may realize. Thrashing Seasons takes an intriguing look at old-time professional wrestling in Manitoba, with a view to illuminating that history, and its broader meaning. --Michael Taube Maclean's Hatton offers a fine example of the breadth a study of sport can achieve in the hands of a skillful historian. An overwhelmingly excellent monograph. --Scott Beekman Journal of Sport History Scholarly historical analysis of professional wrestling has arrived--C. Nathan Hatton's prodigious research and fine writing ground his account of sporting culture and wrestling in Manitoba from its inception among various Indigenous people to the 1930s. --Christopher L. Stacey Histoire sociale / Social History Nathan Hatton's new labour of love, entitled Thrashing Seasons, is a substantive and enlightening publication which should be mandatory reading for anyone seeking an academic degree in Manitoba sports, history, or sociology. It is that important a work. --Marty Goldstein SLAM! Wrestling Hatton's work represents the finest study of Canadian wrestling to date and one of the better pieces of Canadian sport history to be published in recent years. --MacIntosh Ross Sport History Review Throughout Thrashing Seasons, Hatton's exploration of combat culture and prairie wrestling in Manitoba in the 19th and 20th centuries, there is a kind of deep cognitive refrain: why do people do this to each other? Hatton's research and writing moves in a series of wide circles around this idea, as he establishes the cultural context around the budding tradition of prairie wrestling. As he writes vivid accounts of the lives of several early wrestlers, he questions why they're compelled to combat. As it explores the social and cultural constructs that draws in audiences, he worries at the notions: why are people drawn to this sport? --Natalie Zina-Walschots THIS Magazine Thrashing Seasons is a great book. Hatton presents the history of wrestling in Manitoba in a readable, accessible style, but with all the footnotes and references that make the book a solid academic history. --Jim Blanchard Winnipeg Free Press Generations of Canadians have grown up with pro wrestling. Some followed Stu Hart's Calgary-based Stampede Wrestling while others watched WWF (now WWE) matches, where legends like Hulk Hogan and 'Rowdy' Roddy Piper turned a pseudo-ballet into massively lucrative sports entertainment. But the sport's roots in Canada go far back, and cast a longer shadow than we may realize. Thrashing Seasons takes an intriguing look at old-time professional wrestling in Manitoba, with a view to illuminating that history, and its broader meaning. --Michael Taube Maclean's Hatton offers a fine example of the breadth a study of sport can achieve in the hands of a skillful historian. An overwhelmingly excellent monograph. --Scott Beekman Journal of Sport History Scholarly historical analysis of professional wrestling has arrived--C. Nathan Hatton's prodigious research and fine writing ground his account of sporting culture and wrestling in Manitoba from its inception among various Indigenous people to the 1930s. --Christopher L. Stacey Histoire sociale / Social History Nathan Hatton's new labour of love, entitled Thrashing Seasons, is a substantive and enlightening publication which should be mandatory reading for anyone seeking an academic degree in Manitoba sports, history, or sociology. It is that important a work. --Marty Goldstein SLAM! Wrestling Hatton's work represents the finest study of Canadian wrestling to date and one of the better pieces of Canadian sport history to be published in recent years. --MacIntosh Ross Sport History Review Author InformationC. Nathan Hatton grew up in the communities of Prairie River, Saskatchewan and White River, Ontario. He teaches history at Lakehead University in Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |