Lexington Books
Pages: 238
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7391-7508-8 • Hardback • December 2012 • $128.00 • (£98.00)
978-0-7391-7509-5 • eBook • December 2012 • $121.50 • (£94.00)
Introduction: Setting the Scene
Chapter 1: To Remake the Nation's Image, 1958- 1973
Chapter 2: De Gaulle's Sports Crisis, 1958-1973
Chapter 3: Creating an Athletic Force de Frappe, 1973-1984
Chapter 4: Slackening the Strings, 1984-1992
Chapter 5: Victors Triumphant? 1992-2000
Chapter 6: Dénouement, 2000-2010
Conclusion: A Second Sports Crisis?
Notes
Annex I: Selected Biographies of Oral History Subjects
The Making of Les Bleus provides an excellent and timely survey of how the French state navigated its own distinct path between the sporting superpowers and smaller but ruthlessly successful nations, such as the former East Germany, over fifty years from the Cold War to the new world order of the last twenty years. From de Gaulle to Platini, 1968 to elite athletic centers and the media revolution of cable television, this lively account is important reading for historians of sport and post-war France.
— Christopher Young, professor of modern and medieval German studies, University of Cambridge, UK, and author of The 1972 Munich Olympics and the Making of Modern Germany (University of California Press, 2010)
For more than a century, the French have known how to globalize sport. Greece founded the Olympic Games, but Pierre de Coubertin revived them. Britain first organized soccer, but France turned it into the World Cup. However, maybe even the French need help in understanding the social upheaval that culminated on July 12th, 1998 with a million people of every conceivable background dancing the night away on the Avenue des Champs-Élysées after Les Bleus became world champions.
Everyone there knew a little about why Zinedine Zidane, a player of Algerian Arabic descent, was so central to that triumph. Dr. Lindsay Krasnoff uses a historian’s patience and perspective to draw together political, cultural, and historical strands that make sports reflect a nation.
— Rob Hughes, International Herald Tribune
The most detailed history of contemporary French sport to date, The Making of Les Bleus is deeply-researched, wide-ranging, and insightful. By showing how and why the French state invested in unique ways in athletic programs, and interweaving fascinating stories of individual athletes with analysis of institutions, Krasnoff powerfully expands our understanding of the politics of sport in Europe and beyond.
— Laurent Dubois, Duke University, and author of Soccer Empire: The World Cup and the Future of France
The Making of Les Blues is a solid empirical study that is based upon funds in French state archives, French printed reports on sport and memoirs and reports by French athletes and bureaucrats. The bibliography includes 25 'Oral Histories:' interviews and e-mail communications with sport ministers, administrators and experts in the fields of sport, education and health in Paris, Marseille and Rennes. ... Lindsay Sarah Krasnoff’s tale is packed with detailed information about the role of sports politics in the development of France, from being a programmatically non-ethnic, successfully de-colonizing civic society into becoming a nation that is characterized by ethno-social divisions and conflicts.
— Idrottsforum.org
Covering a period of over fifty years, the book considers sports as a primary means by which the French state sought to obtain and expand its own “soft power” in the world arena through the encouragement of national sports programs and culture. Krasnoff has drawn on an impressive range of archival material, as well as numerous interviews that provide readers with a unique perspective on recent years for which much of the written record remains off-limits to researchers. Concluding with a discussion of the most recent “sports crisis” in France (the national football team has suffered some serious losses n the last several years) Krasnoff’s study places more recent events in French sports culture in the context of a nation struggling with competing definitions of Frenchness.
— New Books Network
Krasnoff offers a detailed study of French sports policy since the Second World War, thus opening up for Anglophone readers a scholarly field largely restricted to French-language participants, not least the historians and sociologists working within the hyper productive STAPS universe.
— British Journal Review
This book aims to set in its social and political context the development of French sports policy, its implementation, effects, and reception within and outside France, from 1958 practically to the present day. It focuses on the prized centerpiece of sports policy, the youth coaching systems, which have not been without controversy, particularly in recent years – on which the author is well informed. . . .Krasnoff is particularly good on what happens, and why, in the sports training academies. In sporting terms, she refers to the famous victories of 'les Bleus' in soccer and basketball, but also their notorious losses, including loss of players to foreign leagues.
— Contemporary French Civilization