- •Л.С. Банникова, доцент, кандидат педагогических наук
- •Contents
- •I. Social behaviour and attitudes
- •Ethnic identity: the native British
- •What does it mean to be Scottish?
- •Geographical identity
- •Men and women
- •Attitudes
- •Stereotypes and change
- •English versus British
- •Multiculturalism
- •Conservatism
- •Being different
- •The love of nature
- •The love of animals
- •Formality and informality
- •Public spiritedness and amateurism
- •The Culture of Sport
- •A national passion
- •Gentlemen and players
- •The social importance of sport
- •Cricket
- •Football
- •Animal in sport
- •Foxhunting
- •Other sports
- •II. Religion in britain
- •Religion in Britain
- •Religion and politics
- •Anglicanism
- •Women priests
- •Catholicism
- •Episcopalianism
- •Keeping the sabbath
- •Other conventional Christian churches
- •Other religions, churches and religious movements
- •III. The media
- •The media
- •The importance of the national press
- •The national papers and Scotland
- •The two types of national newspaper
- •The characteristics
- •Papers and politics
- •The characteristics of the national press: sex and scandal
- •Sex and scandal
- •The rest of the press
- •Bbc radio
- •Television: organization
- •Television: style
- •Glued to the goggle box
- •The ratings: a typical week
- •IV. Welfare state
- •Welfare
- •The origins of the welfare state in Britain
- •The National Health Service
- •What does the nhs do?
- •Primary care
- •How primary care is developing
- •Secondary care
- •Tertiary care
- •Hospital building under the Private Finance Initiative
- •Community Care
- •How is the nhs funded?
- •How is the money spent?
- •Increased spending
- •How is the nhs organised?
- •Recent reforms
- •Nhs staff
- •Family doctors
- •The contribution made by the Voluntary Sector
- •Private medicine
- •Personal Social Services
- •Social Services spending
- •Modernising Social Services
- •Family and voluntary carers
- •Meeting increasing demand
- •Older people
- •Disabled people
- •People with learning disabilities
- •Help for families and children
- •Social Security
- •What is social security for?
- •How is social security funded?
- •How is the money spent?
- •Who receives benefits?
- •Benefits and who receives them
- •How is Social Security organised?
- •Types of benefit
- •The Government's aims
- •Welfare Reform
- •246019, Г. Гомель, ул. Советская, 104
- •246019, Г. Гомель, ул. Советская, 104
Animal in sport
Traditionally, the favourite sports of the British upper class are hunting, shooting and fishing. The most widespread form of hunting is foxhunting - indeed, that is what the world 'hunting' usually means in Britain. This is a popular pastime among some members of the higher social classes and a few people from lower social classes, who often seen their participation as a mark of newly won status.
Killing birds with guns is known as 'shooting' in Britain. It is a minority pastime confined largely to the higher social classes; there are more than three times as many licensed guns for this purpose in France as there are in Britain. The birds which people try to shoot (such a s grouse) may only be shot during certain specified times of the year. The upper classes often organize 'shooting parties' during the 'season'.
The only kind of hunting which is associated with the working class hare-coursing, in which greyhound dogs chase hares. However, because the vast majority of people in Britain are urban dwellers, this too is a minority activity.
The one kind of 'hunting' which is popular among all social classes is fishing. In fact, this is the most popular participatory sport of all in Britain. Between four and five million people go fishing regularly. When fishing is done competitively, it is called 'angling'.
Apart from being hunted, another way in which animals are used in sport is when they race. Horse-racing is a long-established and popular sport in Britain, both 'flat racing' and 'national hunt' racing (where there are jumps for the horses), sometimes known as 'steeple-chase'. The former because known as 'the sport of king' in the seventeenth century, and modern British royalty has close connections with sport involving horses. Some members of the royal family own racehorses and attend certain annual race meetings (Ascot, for example); some are also active participants in the sport of polo and show-jumping (both of which involve riding a horse).
The chief attraction of horse-racing for most people is the opportunity it provides for gambling. Greyhound racing, although declining, is still popular for the same reason. In this sport, the dogs chase a mechanical hare round a racetrack. It is easier to organize than horse-racing and 'the dogs' has the reputation of being the 'poor man's racing'.
Foxhunting
Foxhunting works like this. A group of people on horses, dressed in eighteenth century riding clothes, ride around with a pack of dogs. When the dogs pick up the scent of a fox, somebody blows a horn and the dogs, horses and riders all chase the fox. Often the fox gets away, but if not, the dogs get to it before the hunters and tear it to pieces. As you might guess in a country of animal-lovers, where most people have little experience of the harsher realities of nature, foxhunting is strongly opposed by some people. The League Against Cruel Sports wants it made illegal and the campaign has been steadily intensifying. There are sometimes violet encounters between foxhunters and protestors (whom the hunters call 'saboteurs').