Historical Dictionary of Wrestling

Author:   John Grasso
Publisher:   Scarecrow Press
ISBN:  

9780810879256


Pages:   444
Publication Date:   06 March 2014
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Historical Dictionary of Wrestling


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Full Product Details

Author:   John Grasso
Publisher:   Scarecrow Press
Imprint:   Scarecrow Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.20cm , Height: 3.60cm , Length: 23.70cm
Weight:   0.789kg
ISBN:  

9780810879256


ISBN 10:   0810879255
Pages:   444
Publication Date:   06 March 2014
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

An opening chronology covers 708 BCE (wrestling added to the Olympics) to 2013 (wrestling dropped from, then reinstated to the Olympics; Wrestlemania 29). The introduction goes into more detail, alternating between sport and sports entertainment (e.g., 20th-Century Amateur Wrestling--1920-1948 ; 20th-Century Professional Wrestling--Post-World War II )...Dictionary entries range from a few lines to two pages and include people (e.g., Gorgeous George; Vincent K. McMahon; Dan Gable), organizations (e.g., World Wrestling Entertainment; Amateur Athletic Union), terms (e.g., lucha libre; kayfabe; featherweight). Entries give basic biographical information, titles held, postretirement activities, and occasional odd asides...[R]esearchers in need of a reputable source to cite for basic data have it here. Cross-references and see/see also references are provided. The many appendixes include lists of champions for amateur wrestling, and real and ring names for professional wrestling. The bibliography may be useful for researchers. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-level undergraduates and general readers. CHOICE


An opening chronology covers 708 BCE (wrestling added to the Olympics) to 2013 (wrestling dropped from, then reinstated to the Olympics; Wrestlemania 29). The introduction goes into more detail, alternating between sport and sports entertainment (e.g., 20th-Century Amateur Wrestling--1920-1948 ; 20th-Century Professional Wrestling--Post-World War II ). . . .Dictionary entries range from a few lines to two pages and include people (e.g., Gorgeous George; Vincent K. McMahon; Dan Gable), organizations (e.g., World Wrestling Entertainment; Amateur Athletic Union), terms (e.g., lucha libre; kayfabe; featherweight). Entries give basic biographical information, titles held, postretirement activities, and occasional odd asides. . . .[R]esearchers in need of a reputable source to cite for basic data have it here. Cross-references and see/see also references are provided. The many appendixes include lists of champions for amateur wrestling, and real and ring names for professional wrestling. The bibliography may be useful for researchers. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-level undergraduates and general readers. * CHOICE * Wrestling in its pure form-at the high school, college, and Olympic levels-is an exciting, unpredictable, and very competitive sport. Monday night wrestling, or 'wraslin' is not. There is a reason for the 'E' in World Wrestling Entertainment. It is all about entertainment and this latest volume in the publisher's Historical Dictionaries of Sports reflects the scripted version of wrestling. Although various wrestling holds, moves, and history are included, Grasso's work is more about Monday Night Raw and other professional organizations-the televised versions. Readers will find out more about Hulk Hogan, Shawn Michaels, and Bret Harte than wrestling in its amateur form. The dictionary is an alphabetic listing of who, what, and when with a chronology, abbreviation list, and brief introduction included. Eleven appendixes document various features such as nicknames, hall of fame wrestlers, and prominent pay-per-view WWE events. There are references to NCAA champions and Olympic wrestling but the heavy emphasis is clearly the hulking athletes and entertainers who come alive on weekly television and now the newly launched WWE network. * American Reference Books Annual * An opening chronology covers 708 BCE (wrestling added to the Olympics) to 2013 (wrestling dropped from, then reinstated to the Olympics; Wrestlemania 29). The introduction goes into more detail, alternating between sport and sports entertainment (e.g., 20th-Century Amateur Wrestling--1920-1948 ; 20th-Century Professional Wrestling--Post-World War II )...Dictionary entries range from a few lines to two pages and include people (e.g., Gorgeous George; Vincent K. McMahon; Dan Gable), organizations (e.g., World Wrestling Entertainment; Amateur Athletic Union), terms (e.g., lucha libre; kayfabe; featherweight). Entries give basic biographical information, titles held, postretirement activities, and occasional odd asides...[R]esearchers in need of a reputable source to cite for basic data have it here. Cross-references and see/see also references are provided. The many appendixes include lists of champions for amateur wrestling, and real and ring names for professional wrestling. The bibliography may be useful for researchers. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-level undergraduates and general readers. CHOICE Wrestling in its pure form-at the high school, college, and Olympic levels-is an exciting, unpredictable, and very competitive sport. Monday night wrestling, or 'wraslin' is not. There is a reason for the 'E' in World Wrestling Entertainment. It is all about entertainment and this latest volume in the publisher's Historical Dictionaries of Sports reflects the scripted version of wrestling. Although various wrestling holds, moves, and history are included, Grasso's work is more about Monday Night Raw and other professional organizations-the televised versions. Readers will find out more about Hulk Hogan, Shawn Michaels, and Bret Harte than wrestling in its amateur form. The dictionary is an alphabetic listing of who, what, and when with a chronology, abbreviation list, and brief introduction included. Eleven appendixes document various features such as nicknames, hall of fame wrestlers, and prominent pay-per-view WWE events. There are references to NCAA champions and Olympic wrestling but the heavy emphasis is clearly the hulking athletes and entertainers who come alive on weekly television and now the newly launched WWE network. American Reference Books Annual


"An opening chronology covers 708 BCE (wrestling added to the Olympics) to 2013 (wrestling dropped from, then reinstated to the Olympics; Wrestlemania 29). The introduction goes into more detail, alternating between sport and sports entertainment (e.g., ""20th-Century Amateur Wrestling--1920-1948""; ""20th-Century Professional Wrestling--Post-World War II""). . . .Dictionary entries range from a few lines to two pages and include people (e.g., Gorgeous George; Vincent K. McMahon; Dan Gable), organizations (e.g., World Wrestling Entertainment; Amateur Athletic Union), terms (e.g., lucha libre; kayfabe; featherweight). Entries give basic biographical information, titles held, postretirement activities, and occasional odd asides. . . .[R]esearchers in need of a reputable source to cite for basic data have it here. Cross-references and see/see also references are provided. The many appendixes include lists of champions for amateur wrestling, and real and ring names for professional wrestling. The bibliography may be useful for researchers. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-level undergraduates and general readers. * CHOICE * Wrestling in its pure form—at the high school, college, and Olympic levels—is an exciting, unpredictable, and very competitive sport. Monday night wrestling, or 'wraslin' is not. There is a reason for the 'E' in World Wrestling Entertainment. It is all about entertainment and this latest volume in the publisher’s Historical Dictionaries of Sports reflects the scripted version of wrestling. Although various wrestling holds, moves, and history are included, Grasso’s work is more about Monday Night Raw and other professional organizations—the televised versions. Readers will find out more about Hulk Hogan, Shawn Michaels, and Bret Harte than wrestling in its amateur form. The dictionary is an alphabetic listing of who, what, and when with a chronology, abbreviation list, and brief introduction included. Eleven appendixes document various features such as nicknames, hall of fame wrestlers, and prominent pay-per-view WWE events. There are references to NCAA champions and Olympic wrestling but the heavy emphasis is clearly the hulking athletes and entertainers who come alive on weekly television and now the newly launched WWE network. * American Reference Books Annual *"


Author Information

John Grasso has written four other books in the Historical Dictionaries of Sports series: Historical Dictionary of Tennis, Historical Dictionary of Basketball, Historical Dictionary of Football, and Historical Dictionary of Boxing. He is the co-author of The 100 Greatest Boxers of All Time and 505 Boxing Questions Your Friends Can’t Answer and also wrote columns for Ring magazine and Boxing Illustrated. He is a consulting editor for Rowman & Littlefield responsible for acquiring new sports titles and working with their authors.

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