With the help of archival sources, the earliest football codes, and academic scholarship on football and 19th-century British history, this article explores the transformation of football in mid-19th-century Britain as a cultural site where moral frameworks were reconstituted in the image of a rational society. Drawing on Max Weber’s theory of rationalization, specifically his often underplayed insights into the formation of a rational conduct of life, the article shows how the beginnings of modern football were embedded in a shifting moral landscape that culminated in the emergence of what I call ascetic athleticism , an ethos under which athletic practice became a disciplined exercise of self-control, restraint, and moral training. The ideal of fair play functioned as the historically effective carrier of ascetic athleticism by taming what were considered unwanted emotional and irrational impulses and side effects of playing and laid the ground for the institutionalization of a rational conduct of life within the sphere of sport and recreation.
Dominik Döllinger (Fri,) studied this question.