Christopher Scott Thompson
Auteur de The Tour de France: A Cultural History
A propos de l'auteur
Œuvres de Christopher Scott Thompson
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- Nom légal
- Thompson, Christopher Scott
- Sexe
- male
- Nationalité
- Etats-Unis
- Pays (pour la carte)
- Etats-Unis
- Études
- New York University (Ph.D. French Studies and Modern European History, Dissertation "The Third Republic on Wheels: A Social, Cultural, and Political History of Bicycling in France from the Nineteenth Century to World War II.”, 19 97)
New York University (M.A., French Studies, 19 88)
Middlebury College (M.A., French, 19 87)
Harvard University (B.A., French Literature, 1981) - Professions
- Professeur (Histoire)
Historien (France) - Organisations
- Ball State University (Professeur, Histoire, 19 96 | )
New York University (Instructor in European History, 19 95 | 19 96)
Ambassade des Etats-Unis en France, Paris (Speechwriter and Special Assistant for the Honorable Pamela Harriman, 19 93 | 19 94)
The Maret School, Washington, D.C (Professeur, Français, 19 84 | 19 87)
Saint Mark’s School, Southborough, MA. (Professeur, Français, 19 82 | 19 84)
Membres
Critiques
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Statistiques
- Œuvres
- 11
- Aussi par
- 4
- Membres
- 86
- Popularité
- #213,013
- Évaluation
- 4.2
- Critiques
- 1
- ISBN
- 17
This isn’t a book devoted to who dropped whom on what climb. Thompson is fishing in deeper waters. Why is the Tour the way it is? How has it affected French culture and how did French culture affect the Tour? The answers to these questions are important to any cycling fan who wants to know why he has to get up early in the morning to watch a race that is taking place 9 time zones away.
Lance Armstrong voiced his anger that the Tour de France took place in France. Yet, the Tour could only have grown and matured in France. Britain, as a result of the industrial revolution, clustered its population in cities. This made it perfect for stadium sports but ill-suited for cycle road racing. France remained a rural country well into the twentieth century making it perfect for the traveling show that is the Tour. Also, the Tour encouraged and celebrated foreign winners while the Giro connived at denying foreign riders a fair shot at victory. Moreover, the Tour was founded by a strangely gifted man, Henri Desgrange, who guided the Tour from its infancy to sturdy maturity with an iron-fisted despotism. Thompson analyzes the changes to French society that made mass-spectator sport possible at the end of the nineteenth century and how Desgrange exploited them.
The Tour de France, being a cultural history, discusses at length the riders and their economic and social position in society and how it has changed over the years. There is also a very enlightening discussion of doping, a component of racing that cannot be ignored.
This is a wonderful book that will leave the reader with a deeper understanding of the Tour and France. Read this book. It is well written and exhaustively researched. Thompson’s passion for bicycle racing and French history makes each page a pleasure.
There is a bonus. The cover photo of 1947 Tour winner Jean Robic being doused with water by a couple running alongside him has to be one of the greatest cycling pictures of all time. Their obvious joy juxtaposed alongside the struggling rider encapsulates the attraction of the Tour far more than any 1000 words could possibly hope to do.… (plus d'informations)