社论

IF 0.1 Q4 HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM
J. Saunders
{"title":"社论","authors":"J. Saunders","doi":"10.30819/iss.43-2.01","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\n That was the year that was! 2021 seemingly arrived just yesterday and now we are\nshortly to bid it farewell. I hailed its predecessor as heralding the hope for a new clarity\nof vision – the start of a new decade which promised much. However, I have become\nreminded that perfect 20/20 vision in the present may not necessarily lead to reliable\npredictions for the future. Further I have immediately been taken back to my\nundergraduate days and the unforgettable words of the great poet T. S Eliot in his poem\nBurnt Norton – the first of the four Quartets\n\n \nTime present and time past\nAre both perhaps present in time future,\nAnd time future contained in time past.\nIf all time is eternally present\nAll time is unredeemable.\nWhat might have been is an abstraction\nRemaining a perpetual possibility\nOnly in a world of speculation.\nWhat might have been and what has been\nPoint to one end, which is always present\n\n \nThey are words that seem to ring particularly true not only to anyone contemplating\ntheir remorselessly advancing years and reflecting on a career nearing completion, but\nthey also seem particularly apposite for the experiences of the last two years. The\npandemic started by destroying our expectations and predictions for what lay ahead. It\nensured that our best laid plans for our immediate futures would remain unfulfilled and\nthus unredeemable. Subsequently during the year, we were left to speculate as to our\nfuture pathways - not only with regard to our professional activities, but also concerning\nour personal and family relationships – with a whole world of separation between\nourselves and those of our kith and kin domiciled in distant lands. Though for some it\nmay have been no more than a regional border! Such forced isolation caused many of\nus to think backwards as well, reflecting on our past trajectories and recalling both\nmistakes and successes alike. Yet for many it became a time to substitute the incessant\ndemands of work and its associated travel and busy-ness with former and forgotten\npleasures. Leisurely walks with friends and family, the rediscovering of rhythms and\ntempos unimpeded by the daily demands of our diaries and other extraneous demands\non our time that had required us to respond immediately and forgo the immediate needs\nof the surroundings and people closest to us. Above all, with the future in limbo and the\npast re-emerging in our minds, it reinforced the realisation that the present is what we\nreally have, and it contains what is most important.\n\n \n\nFor a time, the incessant chatter and noise of the media retained our attention, just\nas it had dominated our attention at the end of 2019. Yet, somehow during the year, the\nhype and frenzied reporting seems to have diminished in impact. This was nowhere\nmore evident than in the responses to COP26 – the 26th United Nations Climate Change\nConference in Glasgow, UK. Items in the press came thick and fast leading up to the\nevent: predictions of planetary doom; political conflicts were highlighted as world\nleaders met or didn’t meet on the conference stage; appearances by the celebrities of the\nworld; demonstrations aplenty. All of this breathless activity faded imperceptibly out\nof our consciousness as the serious (but more boring?) negotiations between nations\nstarted to take place, with much of the brilliance of the limelight now exhausted. The anticlimactic conclusion was judged by Boris Johnson, the chair and among the most\noptimistic of politicians, as achieving a 6 out of 10. Several positive outcomes were\nidentified such as: commitments to end deforestation; a global methane pledge; a socalled\n‘Breakthrough Agenda’, which committed countries to work together to\naccelerate the clean energy transition. Yet predictably, this was labelled by the critics\nand activists as too little too late.\n\n \n\nAlthough there are many who would see climate crisis as the major crisis that faces\nus – there are many other current crises of even more pressing and immediate concern\nto very many of us. The most urgent of which, would depend upon your own\ncircumstances and where you might find yourself in the world. Examples from recent\nmedia would include: the loss of previously taken for granted freedoms in Hong Kong;\nincreased fears for personal safety and the prospect of hunger and poverty in\nAfghanistan; the loss of political freedoms and the prospects of war in Belarus and the\nUkraine; the prospect of secession leading to renewed civil war in Serbia; another\nmilitary coup in Sudan; civil unrest in Cuba, etc etc.. On a global scale the movement\nof people leaving failed states and war-torn areas looking for the chance to make a better\nfuture, has continued to increase on a scale that the world is quite unable to manage.\nSadly, even in the countries that are eagerly sought as destinies, there seem to be endless\nstories of strife, anxiety and anger to be told. The Economist provides the example of\nFrance, the ninth largest economy in the world with the 20th largest population of 67+\nmillion. This pillar of Europe is facing a presidential election. Far from rejoicing in its\nprosperity, stability and proud history – the mood is sombre.\n\n \n\nTune in to any French prime time talk show this autumn, and discussion\nrages over the country’s wretched decline. France is losing its factories\nand jobs, squeezing incomes and small businesses, destroying its\nlandscapes and language, neglecting its borders and squandering its\nglobal stature. Its people are fractious and divided, if not on the verge of a\ncivil war, as a public letter from retired army officers suggested earlier this\nyear. At the second presidential primary debate for the centre-right\nRepublicans party, on November 14th, the five candidates competed with\neach other to chronicle French disaster. Listen to the hard right, and it is\n“the death of France as we know it”.\n\n \n\nThe anxiety is widespread. In a recent poll 75% agreed that France is “in\ndecline”. When asked to sum up their mood in another survey, the French\nfavoured three words: uncertainty, worry and fatigue.\n\n \n\nSo, we are entitled to ask, what is happening in the world as we contemplate the\npath out of Covid? Should we not be expecting some feeling of optimism and gratitude\nthat modern medicine has provided a way forward out of the pandemic through\nvaccination and new medical treatments? We should be putting the trials and\ntribulations of the pandemic behind us, embracing the lessons we have learnt and\nanticipating the benefits of the reassessments and recalibrations we have undergone\nover the last two years. Yet instead, we seem to be facing re-entry into a world of strife\nand dissension. It is a view that that would seem to encourage retreat into the comfort\nof a limited and familiar space, rather than striking out confidently and optimistically.\n\n \n\nSo, to return to Eliot – perhaps we need to be reminded that the present is all we\nhave. We will only be able to experience our future when we arrive there. Therefore,\nthe pathway we choose to it, should be as smooth, rich and rewarding as possible. It should not be characterised by hedonism but rather by enhancing rather than\ndiminishing the future. Every moment spent devaluing either our future or our past, is\na moment that further undermines our present.\n\n \n\nThis last point is particularly true when we fail to see our present in the context of\nboth our past and future. One of the major contributions to this current angst within our\nsocieties, appears to be the cultural wars being waged by the warriors of WOKE.\nPassing judgements on figures from a previous time, without a clear understanding of\nthe context in which they operated makes absolutely no sense. It is akin to a capital\npunishment abolitionist vilifying the heroes of the French Revolution for allowing\nMadame Guillotine to be the agent of their retribution against the aristocracy. So, it is\nwith defacing statues of those who lived and acted in far different times and were the\nproduct of the dominant values and beliefs of that time. It is indeed an act of vandalism.\nIf we remove all evidence of the history to which such people belonged, how can we\nexpect to learn from that time and ensure that the world does indeed move forward?\n\n \n\nAlthough we are talking about the context provided by time – this is equally true\nof all the contexts in which we currently find ourselves. It is impossible to understand\nhuman behaviour without knowing and understanding the context in which it occurs.\nThis is a key principle of the science of human behaviour. Alas it is a principle that has\nbeen neglected in the sport sciences in recent years. Whereas research into the\nphysiology, psychology and biomechanics of sport has flourished, too often it is\nreported in a way that fails to adequately take account of the context in which it occurs.\nIt is why so many findings are ungeneralisable and remain in the laboratory rather than\nmaking the journey out onto the playing field of life. Understanding the history and the\nsocial context within which sport is practised is essential if scientists and professionals\nare going to be able to make comparisons between findings gained in different settings.\nComparative studies in sport and physical education play an important role in enabling\nknowledge and understanding about these institutions to be widely shared. Our journal\ntherefore has an important role to play in the development and sharing of knowledge\nand understanding between scientists and professionals in different settings. This is a\nrole that has been filled by our journal over the last forty-three years. I am pleased to be\nable to report that the society (ISCPES), following a break of four years in activity, will\nbe meeting again at the end of this year. The meeting which can be attended online will\nbe hosted by Lakshmibai National College of Physical Education in India. Details are\nprovided in this edition, and I commend this important meeting to you. That there is an\ninter","PeriodicalId":40315,"journal":{"name":"International Sports Studies","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2021-12-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Editorial\",\"authors\":\"J. Saunders\",\"doi\":\"10.30819/iss.43-2.01\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"\\n That was the year that was! 2021 seemingly arrived just yesterday and now we are\\nshortly to bid it farewell. I hailed its predecessor as heralding the hope for a new clarity\\nof vision – the start of a new decade which promised much. However, I have become\\nreminded that perfect 20/20 vision in the present may not necessarily lead to reliable\\npredictions for the future. Further I have immediately been taken back to my\\nundergraduate days and the unforgettable words of the great poet T. S Eliot in his poem\\nBurnt Norton – the first of the four Quartets\\n\\n \\nTime present and time past\\nAre both perhaps present in time future,\\nAnd time future contained in time past.\\nIf all time is eternally present\\nAll time is unredeemable.\\nWhat might have been is an abstraction\\nRemaining a perpetual possibility\\nOnly in a world of speculation.\\nWhat might have been and what has been\\nPoint to one end, which is always present\\n\\n \\nThey are words that seem to ring particularly true not only to anyone contemplating\\ntheir remorselessly advancing years and reflecting on a career nearing completion, but\\nthey also seem particularly apposite for the experiences of the last two years. The\\npandemic started by destroying our expectations and predictions for what lay ahead. It\\nensured that our best laid plans for our immediate futures would remain unfulfilled and\\nthus unredeemable. Subsequently during the year, we were left to speculate as to our\\nfuture pathways - not only with regard to our professional activities, but also concerning\\nour personal and family relationships – with a whole world of separation between\\nourselves and those of our kith and kin domiciled in distant lands. Though for some it\\nmay have been no more than a regional border! Such forced isolation caused many of\\nus to think backwards as well, reflecting on our past trajectories and recalling both\\nmistakes and successes alike. Yet for many it became a time to substitute the incessant\\ndemands of work and its associated travel and busy-ness with former and forgotten\\npleasures. Leisurely walks with friends and family, the rediscovering of rhythms and\\ntempos unimpeded by the daily demands of our diaries and other extraneous demands\\non our time that had required us to respond immediately and forgo the immediate needs\\nof the surroundings and people closest to us. Above all, with the future in limbo and the\\npast re-emerging in our minds, it reinforced the realisation that the present is what we\\nreally have, and it contains what is most important.\\n\\n \\n\\nFor a time, the incessant chatter and noise of the media retained our attention, just\\nas it had dominated our attention at the end of 2019. Yet, somehow during the year, the\\nhype and frenzied reporting seems to have diminished in impact. This was nowhere\\nmore evident than in the responses to COP26 – the 26th United Nations Climate Change\\nConference in Glasgow, UK. Items in the press came thick and fast leading up to the\\nevent: predictions of planetary doom; political conflicts were highlighted as world\\nleaders met or didn’t meet on the conference stage; appearances by the celebrities of the\\nworld; demonstrations aplenty. All of this breathless activity faded imperceptibly out\\nof our consciousness as the serious (but more boring?) negotiations between nations\\nstarted to take place, with much of the brilliance of the limelight now exhausted. The anticlimactic conclusion was judged by Boris Johnson, the chair and among the most\\noptimistic of politicians, as achieving a 6 out of 10. Several positive outcomes were\\nidentified such as: commitments to end deforestation; a global methane pledge; a socalled\\n‘Breakthrough Agenda’, which committed countries to work together to\\naccelerate the clean energy transition. Yet predictably, this was labelled by the critics\\nand activists as too little too late.\\n\\n \\n\\nAlthough there are many who would see climate crisis as the major crisis that faces\\nus – there are many other current crises of even more pressing and immediate concern\\nto very many of us. The most urgent of which, would depend upon your own\\ncircumstances and where you might find yourself in the world. Examples from recent\\nmedia would include: the loss of previously taken for granted freedoms in Hong Kong;\\nincreased fears for personal safety and the prospect of hunger and poverty in\\nAfghanistan; the loss of political freedoms and the prospects of war in Belarus and the\\nUkraine; the prospect of secession leading to renewed civil war in Serbia; another\\nmilitary coup in Sudan; civil unrest in Cuba, etc etc.. On a global scale the movement\\nof people leaving failed states and war-torn areas looking for the chance to make a better\\nfuture, has continued to increase on a scale that the world is quite unable to manage.\\nSadly, even in the countries that are eagerly sought as destinies, there seem to be endless\\nstories of strife, anxiety and anger to be told. The Economist provides the example of\\nFrance, the ninth largest economy in the world with the 20th largest population of 67+\\nmillion. This pillar of Europe is facing a presidential election. Far from rejoicing in its\\nprosperity, stability and proud history – the mood is sombre.\\n\\n \\n\\nTune in to any French prime time talk show this autumn, and discussion\\nrages over the country’s wretched decline. France is losing its factories\\nand jobs, squeezing incomes and small businesses, destroying its\\nlandscapes and language, neglecting its borders and squandering its\\nglobal stature. Its people are fractious and divided, if not on the verge of a\\ncivil war, as a public letter from retired army officers suggested earlier this\\nyear. At the second presidential primary debate for the centre-right\\nRepublicans party, on November 14th, the five candidates competed with\\neach other to chronicle French disaster. Listen to the hard right, and it is\\n“the death of France as we know it”.\\n\\n \\n\\nThe anxiety is widespread. In a recent poll 75% agreed that France is “in\\ndecline”. When asked to sum up their mood in another survey, the French\\nfavoured three words: uncertainty, worry and fatigue.\\n\\n \\n\\nSo, we are entitled to ask, what is happening in the world as we contemplate the\\npath out of Covid? Should we not be expecting some feeling of optimism and gratitude\\nthat modern medicine has provided a way forward out of the pandemic through\\nvaccination and new medical treatments? We should be putting the trials and\\ntribulations of the pandemic behind us, embracing the lessons we have learnt and\\nanticipating the benefits of the reassessments and recalibrations we have undergone\\nover the last two years. Yet instead, we seem to be facing re-entry into a world of strife\\nand dissension. It is a view that that would seem to encourage retreat into the comfort\\nof a limited and familiar space, rather than striking out confidently and optimistically.\\n\\n \\n\\nSo, to return to Eliot – perhaps we need to be reminded that the present is all we\\nhave. We will only be able to experience our future when we arrive there. Therefore,\\nthe pathway we choose to it, should be as smooth, rich and rewarding as possible. It should not be characterised by hedonism but rather by enhancing rather than\\ndiminishing the future. Every moment spent devaluing either our future or our past, is\\na moment that further undermines our present.\\n\\n \\n\\nThis last point is particularly true when we fail to see our present in the context of\\nboth our past and future. One of the major contributions to this current angst within our\\nsocieties, appears to be the cultural wars being waged by the warriors of WOKE.\\nPassing judgements on figures from a previous time, without a clear understanding of\\nthe context in which they operated makes absolutely no sense. It is akin to a capital\\npunishment abolitionist vilifying the heroes of the French Revolution for allowing\\nMadame Guillotine to be the agent of their retribution against the aristocracy. So, it is\\nwith defacing statues of those who lived and acted in far different times and were the\\nproduct of the dominant values and beliefs of that time. It is indeed an act of vandalism.\\nIf we remove all evidence of the history to which such people belonged, how can we\\nexpect to learn from that time and ensure that the world does indeed move forward?\\n\\n \\n\\nAlthough we are talking about the context provided by time – this is equally true\\nof all the contexts in which we currently find ourselves. It is impossible to understand\\nhuman behaviour without knowing and understanding the context in which it occurs.\\nThis is a key principle of the science of human behaviour. Alas it is a principle that has\\nbeen neglected in the sport sciences in recent years. Whereas research into the\\nphysiology, psychology and biomechanics of sport has flourished, too often it is\\nreported in a way that fails to adequately take account of the context in which it occurs.\\nIt is why so many findings are ungeneralisable and remain in the laboratory rather than\\nmaking the journey out onto the playing field of life. Understanding the history and the\\nsocial context within which sport is practised is essential if scientists and professionals\\nare going to be able to make comparisons between findings gained in different settings.\\nComparative studies in sport and physical education play an important role in enabling\\nknowledge and understanding about these institutions to be widely shared. Our journal\\ntherefore has an important role to play in the development and sharing of knowledge\\nand understanding between scientists and professionals in different settings. This is a\\nrole that has been filled by our journal over the last forty-three years. I am pleased to be\\nable to report that the society (ISCPES), following a break of four years in activity, will\\nbe meeting again at the end of this year. The meeting which can be attended online will\\nbe hosted by Lakshmibai National College of Physical Education in India. Details are\\nprovided in this edition, and I commend this important meeting to you. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

欧洲的这一支柱正面临总统大选。人们非但没有为它的繁荣、稳定和自豪的历史感到高兴,反而情绪低落。今年秋天,收看任何一个法国黄金时段的脱口秀节目,人们都会热烈讨论这个国家的悲惨衰落。法国正在失去工厂和工作,挤压收入和小企业,破坏其景观和语言,忽视其边界,浪费其全球地位。正如今年早些时候一封来自退役军官的公开信所暗示的那样,它的人民即使不处于种族战争的边缘,也会脾气暴躁、分裂。11月14日,在中右翼共和党的第二次总统初选辩论中,五位候选人相互竞争,记录法国的灾难。听听极右翼的意见,这就是“我们所知道的法国之死”。焦虑情绪普遍存在。在最近的一项民意调查中,75%的人认为法国“不友好”。当被要求在另一项调查中总结他们的情绪时,法国人回答了三个词:不确定性、担忧和疲劳。因此,我们有权问,当我们思考摆脱新冠肺炎的路径时,世界上正在发生什么?我们难道不应该期待一些乐观和欣慰的感觉吗?现代医学通过疫苗接种和新的医疗方法为摆脱疫情提供了一条出路?我们应该把对新冠疫情的试验和假设抛在脑后,接受我们所吸取的教训,并预测我们在过去两年中所做的重新评估和调整的好处。然而,相反,我们似乎正面临着重新进入一个斗争和分歧的世界。这种观点似乎鼓励人们退回到一个有限而熟悉的空间里,而不是自信而乐观地走出去。所以,回到艾略特身上——也许我们需要提醒,现在就是我们所拥有的一切。只有当我们到达那里时,我们才能体验我们的未来。因此,我们选择的通往它的道路应该尽可能地平坦、丰富和有回报。它不应该以享乐主义为特征,而应该以增强而不是削弱未来为特征。每一个贬低我们的未来或过去的时刻,都会进一步破坏我们的现在。当我们不能从过去和未来的角度来看待我们的现在时,最后一点尤其正确。造成我们社会当前焦虑的主要原因之一,似乎是WOKE战士们正在发动的文化战争。在不清楚他们运作的背景的情况下,对以前的人物进行评判是毫无意义的。这类似于死刑废奴主义者诋毁法国大革命的英雄们,因为他们允许吉洛廷夫人作为报复贵族的代理人。因此,这是因为污损了那些生活和行动在截然不同时代的人的雕像,他们是那个时代主流价值观和信仰的产物。这确实是一种蓄意破坏行为。如果我们删除了这些人所属历史的所有证据,我们如何期望从那个时代吸取教训,确保世界真正向前发展?尽管我们谈论的是时间提供的环境,但这同样适用于我们目前所处的所有环境。如果不了解和理解人类行为发生的背景,就不可能理解人类行为。这是人类行为科学的一个关键原则。遗憾的是,这是近年来体育科学中被忽视的一个原则。尽管对运动的生理学、心理学和生物力学的研究已经蓬勃发展,但它的报道方式往往没有充分考虑到它发生的背景。这就是为什么如此多的发现是不可概括的,并停留在实验室中,而不是踏上人生的旅程。如果科学家和专业人士能够对不同环境下的研究结果进行比较,了解体育运动的历史和社会背景是至关重要的。体育和体育教育的比较研究在广泛分享对这些机构的认识和理解方面发挥着重要作用。因此,我们的日记在不同环境中的科学家和专业人士之间的知识和理解的发展和共享方面发挥着重要作用。这是我们杂志在过去四十三年里一直在写的一篇文章。我很高兴能够报告,该协会(ISCPES)在中断了四年的活动后,将于今年年底再次召开会议。该会议将由印度Lakshmibai国立体育学院主办,可以在线参加。本版提供了详细信息,我向您推荐这次重要会议。有一个
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editorial
That was the year that was! 2021 seemingly arrived just yesterday and now we are shortly to bid it farewell. I hailed its predecessor as heralding the hope for a new clarity of vision – the start of a new decade which promised much. However, I have become reminded that perfect 20/20 vision in the present may not necessarily lead to reliable predictions for the future. Further I have immediately been taken back to my undergraduate days and the unforgettable words of the great poet T. S Eliot in his poem Burnt Norton – the first of the four Quartets Time present and time past Are both perhaps present in time future, And time future contained in time past. If all time is eternally present All time is unredeemable. What might have been is an abstraction Remaining a perpetual possibility Only in a world of speculation. What might have been and what has been Point to one end, which is always present They are words that seem to ring particularly true not only to anyone contemplating their remorselessly advancing years and reflecting on a career nearing completion, but they also seem particularly apposite for the experiences of the last two years. The pandemic started by destroying our expectations and predictions for what lay ahead. It ensured that our best laid plans for our immediate futures would remain unfulfilled and thus unredeemable. Subsequently during the year, we were left to speculate as to our future pathways - not only with regard to our professional activities, but also concerning our personal and family relationships – with a whole world of separation between ourselves and those of our kith and kin domiciled in distant lands. Though for some it may have been no more than a regional border! Such forced isolation caused many of us to think backwards as well, reflecting on our past trajectories and recalling both mistakes and successes alike. Yet for many it became a time to substitute the incessant demands of work and its associated travel and busy-ness with former and forgotten pleasures. Leisurely walks with friends and family, the rediscovering of rhythms and tempos unimpeded by the daily demands of our diaries and other extraneous demands on our time that had required us to respond immediately and forgo the immediate needs of the surroundings and people closest to us. Above all, with the future in limbo and the past re-emerging in our minds, it reinforced the realisation that the present is what we really have, and it contains what is most important. For a time, the incessant chatter and noise of the media retained our attention, just as it had dominated our attention at the end of 2019. Yet, somehow during the year, the hype and frenzied reporting seems to have diminished in impact. This was nowhere more evident than in the responses to COP26 – the 26th United Nations Climate Change Conference in Glasgow, UK. Items in the press came thick and fast leading up to the event: predictions of planetary doom; political conflicts were highlighted as world leaders met or didn’t meet on the conference stage; appearances by the celebrities of the world; demonstrations aplenty. All of this breathless activity faded imperceptibly out of our consciousness as the serious (but more boring?) negotiations between nations started to take place, with much of the brilliance of the limelight now exhausted. The anticlimactic conclusion was judged by Boris Johnson, the chair and among the most optimistic of politicians, as achieving a 6 out of 10. Several positive outcomes were identified such as: commitments to end deforestation; a global methane pledge; a socalled ‘Breakthrough Agenda’, which committed countries to work together to accelerate the clean energy transition. Yet predictably, this was labelled by the critics and activists as too little too late. Although there are many who would see climate crisis as the major crisis that faces us – there are many other current crises of even more pressing and immediate concern to very many of us. The most urgent of which, would depend upon your own circumstances and where you might find yourself in the world. Examples from recent media would include: the loss of previously taken for granted freedoms in Hong Kong; increased fears for personal safety and the prospect of hunger and poverty in Afghanistan; the loss of political freedoms and the prospects of war in Belarus and the Ukraine; the prospect of secession leading to renewed civil war in Serbia; another military coup in Sudan; civil unrest in Cuba, etc etc.. On a global scale the movement of people leaving failed states and war-torn areas looking for the chance to make a better future, has continued to increase on a scale that the world is quite unable to manage. Sadly, even in the countries that are eagerly sought as destinies, there seem to be endless stories of strife, anxiety and anger to be told. The Economist provides the example of France, the ninth largest economy in the world with the 20th largest population of 67+ million. This pillar of Europe is facing a presidential election. Far from rejoicing in its prosperity, stability and proud history – the mood is sombre. Tune in to any French prime time talk show this autumn, and discussion rages over the country’s wretched decline. France is losing its factories and jobs, squeezing incomes and small businesses, destroying its landscapes and language, neglecting its borders and squandering its global stature. Its people are fractious and divided, if not on the verge of a civil war, as a public letter from retired army officers suggested earlier this year. At the second presidential primary debate for the centre-right Republicans party, on November 14th, the five candidates competed with each other to chronicle French disaster. Listen to the hard right, and it is “the death of France as we know it”. The anxiety is widespread. In a recent poll 75% agreed that France is “in decline”. When asked to sum up their mood in another survey, the French favoured three words: uncertainty, worry and fatigue. So, we are entitled to ask, what is happening in the world as we contemplate the path out of Covid? Should we not be expecting some feeling of optimism and gratitude that modern medicine has provided a way forward out of the pandemic through vaccination and new medical treatments? We should be putting the trials and tribulations of the pandemic behind us, embracing the lessons we have learnt and anticipating the benefits of the reassessments and recalibrations we have undergone over the last two years. Yet instead, we seem to be facing re-entry into a world of strife and dissension. It is a view that that would seem to encourage retreat into the comfort of a limited and familiar space, rather than striking out confidently and optimistically. So, to return to Eliot – perhaps we need to be reminded that the present is all we have. We will only be able to experience our future when we arrive there. Therefore, the pathway we choose to it, should be as smooth, rich and rewarding as possible. It should not be characterised by hedonism but rather by enhancing rather than diminishing the future. Every moment spent devaluing either our future or our past, is a moment that further undermines our present. This last point is particularly true when we fail to see our present in the context of both our past and future. One of the major contributions to this current angst within our societies, appears to be the cultural wars being waged by the warriors of WOKE. Passing judgements on figures from a previous time, without a clear understanding of the context in which they operated makes absolutely no sense. It is akin to a capital punishment abolitionist vilifying the heroes of the French Revolution for allowing Madame Guillotine to be the agent of their retribution against the aristocracy. So, it is with defacing statues of those who lived and acted in far different times and were the product of the dominant values and beliefs of that time. It is indeed an act of vandalism. If we remove all evidence of the history to which such people belonged, how can we expect to learn from that time and ensure that the world does indeed move forward? Although we are talking about the context provided by time – this is equally true of all the contexts in which we currently find ourselves. It is impossible to understand human behaviour without knowing and understanding the context in which it occurs. This is a key principle of the science of human behaviour. Alas it is a principle that has been neglected in the sport sciences in recent years. Whereas research into the physiology, psychology and biomechanics of sport has flourished, too often it is reported in a way that fails to adequately take account of the context in which it occurs. It is why so many findings are ungeneralisable and remain in the laboratory rather than making the journey out onto the playing field of life. Understanding the history and the social context within which sport is practised is essential if scientists and professionals are going to be able to make comparisons between findings gained in different settings. Comparative studies in sport and physical education play an important role in enabling knowledge and understanding about these institutions to be widely shared. Our journal therefore has an important role to play in the development and sharing of knowledge and understanding between scientists and professionals in different settings. This is a role that has been filled by our journal over the last forty-three years. I am pleased to be able to report that the society (ISCPES), following a break of four years in activity, will be meeting again at the end of this year. The meeting which can be attended online will be hosted by Lakshmibai National College of Physical Education in India. Details are provided in this edition, and I commend this important meeting to you. That there is an inter
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来源期刊
International Sports Studies
International Sports Studies HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM-
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
2
期刊介绍: International Sports Studies (ISS) is a scholarly journal in the field of physical education and sport with a unique focus. Its aim is to advance understanding and communication between members of the global community who share a professional, personal or scholarly interest in the state and development of physical education and sport around the world. International Sports Studies (ISS) is today without paradigmatic prejudice and reflects an eclectic approach to the task of understanding physical education and sport in the contemporary world. It asks only that its contributors can add to knowledge about international physical education and sport studies through studies involving comparisons between regional, national and international settings or by providing unique insights into specific national and local phenomena which contribute to an understanding that can be shared across as well as within national borders.
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