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The GAA Machine: Counties, Clubs and the Culture That Built Irish Sport. Irish Sporting Culture, #1
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235103689
- EAN9798235103689
- Date de parution06/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
The GAA is more than a sporting organisation. It is one of the great cultural machines of Irish life. From parish pitches to Croke Park, from county colours to All-Ireland final days, from hurling and Gaelic football to camogie and ladies' Gaelic football, the Gaelic Athletic Association has shaped how Ireland understands sport, place, identity and belonging. The GAA Machine explores how counties, clubs, volunteers, schools, media, amateurism, sponsorship, women's games, diaspora communities and local rivalries built one of the most distinctive sporting cultures in the world.
Written for GAA supporters, Irish sports fans, diaspora readers, sports business readers, students, journalists, podcasters and anyone interested in Irish culture, this book looks beyond simple nostalgia. It explains why the GAA still matters, how it works, and why its future is being shaped by modern pressures. Inside, you'll discover:- How the GAA emerged from Ireland's older sporting and cultural landscape- Why the founding of the association in 1884 changed Irish sport- How county identity became one of the GAA's greatest strengths- Why the local club is the engine of the entire system- How amateurism became both a moral force and a modern challenge- Why hurling carries such speed, skill and ancient prestige- How Gaelic football became the national game of counties- Why Croke Park is more than a stadium- How the All-Ireland Championship became a national ritual- Why rivalries, dynasties and county memory shape GAA culture- How schools and youth systems reproduce belonging- Why broadcasting, streaming and media rights create such debate- How money, sponsorship and commercial growth test the GAA model- Why player welfare has become central to the future of amateur sport- How camogie and ladies' Gaelic football are reshaping Irish sporting culture- How the diaspora carries Gaelic games across the world- Why modernisation must protect the soul of the gamesThe GAA survives because it belongs to people before it belongs to markets.
That is its strength. It is also its challenge. The GAA Machine is a clear, thoughtful and accessible guide to the counties, clubs and culture that built Irish sport.
Written for GAA supporters, Irish sports fans, diaspora readers, sports business readers, students, journalists, podcasters and anyone interested in Irish culture, this book looks beyond simple nostalgia. It explains why the GAA still matters, how it works, and why its future is being shaped by modern pressures. Inside, you'll discover:- How the GAA emerged from Ireland's older sporting and cultural landscape- Why the founding of the association in 1884 changed Irish sport- How county identity became one of the GAA's greatest strengths- Why the local club is the engine of the entire system- How amateurism became both a moral force and a modern challenge- Why hurling carries such speed, skill and ancient prestige- How Gaelic football became the national game of counties- Why Croke Park is more than a stadium- How the All-Ireland Championship became a national ritual- Why rivalries, dynasties and county memory shape GAA culture- How schools and youth systems reproduce belonging- Why broadcasting, streaming and media rights create such debate- How money, sponsorship and commercial growth test the GAA model- Why player welfare has become central to the future of amateur sport- How camogie and ladies' Gaelic football are reshaping Irish sporting culture- How the diaspora carries Gaelic games across the world- Why modernisation must protect the soul of the gamesThe GAA survives because it belongs to people before it belongs to markets.
That is its strength. It is also its challenge. The GAA Machine is a clear, thoughtful and accessible guide to the counties, clubs and culture that built Irish sport.








