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Camogie and the Rise of Women’s Gaelic Games: Visibility, Tradition and the Future of Irish Sport. Irish Sporting Culture, #4
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235930353
- EAN9798235930353
- Date de parution08/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
Camogie is one of Ireland's fastest, proudest and most important women's sports. Played with a hurley, a sliotar and generations of local memory behind it, camogie is more than a companion to hurling. It is a game of its own: a sport shaped by speed, skill, county loyalty, club labour, volunteer commitment, women's leadership and the long fight to be seen on its own terms. Camogie and the Rise of Women's Gaelic Games explores the history, culture and future of a sport standing at the centre of change in Irish life.
Written for GAA supporters, Irish sports fans, diaspora readers, students, journalists, visitors and anyone interested in women's sport, this book looks beyond simple praise to ask what real visibility and respect actually require. Inside, you'll discover: How camogie developed its own identity within the Gaelic games family Why the sport should not be treated as a smaller version of hurling How county jerseys, rivalries and local pride shape the camogie world Why clubs, schools, mothers, coaches and volunteers remain the hidden infrastructure of the game How Croke Park, finals day and championship structures shape public memory Why broadcasting, streaming and media language matter to women's sport How sponsorship and commercial value are changing the future of women's Gaelic games Why player welfare, travel, training load and amateurism are central to modern camogie How the skorts debate became a wider argument about autonomy, dignity and player voice Why Cork, Kilkenny and Galway matter to the story of dominance and competitive balance How One Club structures and integration debates could reshape Gaelic games Why diaspora camogie carries Irish identity across borders What camogie can learn from the wider women's sport boom What true respect for the game would look like in practice This is not a rules primer, a nostalgic annual or a generic beginner guide.
It is a serious but readable work of Irish sports culture, history and sports-business analysis. Camogie has survived because women and communities kept teaching it, playing it, funding it, organising it, defending it and passing it on. Its future will depend on more than applause. It will depend on facilities, media habits, governance, player welfare, sponsorship, school pathways, club structures and the willingness of Irish sport to treat women's games as central rather than secondary.
Camogie and the Rise of Women's Gaelic Games is a clear, thoughtful and accessible guide to visibility, tradition and the future of Irish sport.
Written for GAA supporters, Irish sports fans, diaspora readers, students, journalists, visitors and anyone interested in women's sport, this book looks beyond simple praise to ask what real visibility and respect actually require. Inside, you'll discover: How camogie developed its own identity within the Gaelic games family Why the sport should not be treated as a smaller version of hurling How county jerseys, rivalries and local pride shape the camogie world Why clubs, schools, mothers, coaches and volunteers remain the hidden infrastructure of the game How Croke Park, finals day and championship structures shape public memory Why broadcasting, streaming and media language matter to women's sport How sponsorship and commercial value are changing the future of women's Gaelic games Why player welfare, travel, training load and amateurism are central to modern camogie How the skorts debate became a wider argument about autonomy, dignity and player voice Why Cork, Kilkenny and Galway matter to the story of dominance and competitive balance How One Club structures and integration debates could reshape Gaelic games Why diaspora camogie carries Irish identity across borders What camogie can learn from the wider women's sport boom What true respect for the game would look like in practice This is not a rules primer, a nostalgic annual or a generic beginner guide.
It is a serious but readable work of Irish sports culture, history and sports-business analysis. Camogie has survived because women and communities kept teaching it, playing it, funding it, organising it, defending it and passing it on. Its future will depend on more than applause. It will depend on facilities, media habits, governance, player welfare, sponsorship, school pathways, club structures and the willingness of Irish sport to treat women's games as central rather than secondary.
Camogie and the Rise of Women's Gaelic Games is a clear, thoughtful and accessible guide to visibility, tradition and the future of Irish sport.








