Sport and the Cornish: difference and identity on the English periphery in the twentieth century |
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Authors: | Dilwyn Porter |
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Institution: | 1. International Centre for Sports History and Culture, De Montfort University, Leicester, UKDilwyn.Porter@dmu.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | Cornwall differs from other English counties, not least because a significant percentage of those who live there self-identify as ‘Cornish’ rather than ‘English’ or British'. Sport has helped to underpin ‘the persistence of difference’. Distinctive versions of hurling and wrestling were key signifiers in this respect. In addition, Cornwall developed a particular affinity for rugby, similar to that found in Wales. In the late twentieth century, with indigenous Cornish culture threatened by deindustrialisation and in-migration, the county's rugby team enjoyed considerable success. Sport, in these conditions, became a signifier not merely of difference, but of a self-conscious Cornish identity. |
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Keywords: | Cornwall Cornishness identity indigenous sports rugby |
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