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Journal ArticleDOI

Origins in History and Historiography: A Case Study of the First Swimmer at Bondi Beach

Douglas Booth
- 01 Jan 2016 - 
- Vol. 43, Iss: 1, pp 21-36
TLDR
In this paper, the authors investigate the origins of early swimming in the surf at the famous Australian beach of Bondi as a case study and identify the conditions under which historical narratives gain social acceptance and the philosophical value of analyzing origins.
Abstract
The search for origins is a hallmark of historical practice; origins are also fundamental to historical narratives, the predominant form by which historians present their interpretations of the past Yet, paradoxically, history is ill-suited to studying firsts or origins As the historian of culture and influential figure in historiography Jacob Burckhardt reminds us, single beginnings are rare phenomena In this article, I investigate this paradox using swimming in the surf at the renowned Australian beach of Bondi as a case study At one level, the history of swimming at Bondi is well known Waverley Council built the Bondi Baths in the last quarter of the nineteenth century to protect bathers from dangerous surf and currents and to control how bathers revealed themselves in public Over time, bathers became more proficient swimmers, and competitive individuals practiced the activity as a codified sport Adventurous souls braved the surf and became surf swimmers and bodysurfers, and local authorities progressively relaxed the rules that defined how, and when, bathers presented their bodies in public By the 1920s, Bondi was a bathing and swimming Mecca among Sydneysiders and other Australians However, this history is strangely silent about the origins (and nature) of early swimming at Bondi While scant primary sources partly explain the silence, it is also a function of the fact that history does not contain fully defined or fully formed subjects ready for analysis Historians demarcate and position their subjects that they then configure into narratives Each of these historiographical processes involves choices on the part of the historian that leaves inordinate space for alternative histories In the search for Bondi’s first swimmer, I highlight these choices that, I argue, simultaneously direct attention to the speculative nature of origins and reaffirm them as an inescapable dimension of narrative form In concluding this article, I identify the conditions under which historical narratives gain social acceptance and the philosophical value of analyzing origins

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Routledge Companion to Historical Studies

Alan Day
TL;DR: The authors provided a critical introduction to historical studies, examining the key issues, the historians and philosophers, and the concepts, ideas and theories which have prompted the rethinking of history which has been gathering momentum in the 1990s.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sport history, modernity and the logic of coloniality: a case for decoloniality

TL;DR: The authors argue that sport history has remained problematically wedded to assumptions and concepts of Western capitalist modernity, and as a result, such sport historical narratives have remained problematic for sport history.

Look at that kid crawling!: Race, myth, and the crawl stroke

Gary Osmond
TL;DR: The swimming racing stroke, the crawl, or freestyle as it is known in contemporary parlance, was invented by a Solomon Island schoolboy named Alick Wickham as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Book

Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-Century Europe

Hayden White
TL;DR: Metahistory as mentioned in this paper was the first work in the history of historiography to concentrate on historical writing as writing, and it was one of the seminal works in the field of history.
Book

The world of Odysseus

TL;DR: This article analyzed Homer's depiction of kinship and community, Helen and Hector, morals and values, Paris, Priam and the gods in the "Iliad" and the "Odyssey".