Sport in South Asian Society: Past and Present

Εξώφυλλο
Boria Majumdar, J. A. Mangan
Psychology Press, 2005 - 344 σελίδες

A detailed study of sports' arrival, spread and advance in colonial and post-colonial South Asia. A selection of articles addresses critical issues of nationalism, communalism, commercialism and gender through the lens of sport.

This book makes the point that the social histories of South Asian sport cannot be understood by simply looking at the history of the game in one province or region. Furthermore, it demonstrates that it would be wrong to understand sport in terms of the exigencies of the colonial state.

Drawing inspiration from C.L.R. James' well-known epigram, 'What do they know of cricket who only cricket know?' the findings suggest that South Asian sport makes sense only when it is placed within the broader colonial and post-colonial context. The book demonstrates that sport not only influences politics and vice versa, but that the two are inseparable. Sport is not only political, it is politics, intrigue, culture and art. To deny this is to denigrate the position of sport in modern South Asian society.

This volume was previously published as a special issue of The International Journal of the History of Sport.

 

Περιεχόμενα

Stepping Stones Across a Stream
8
Imperial Provenance and Radical
15
A Revisionist Perspective on a Famous Indian
27
The Games Ethic
48
BORIA MAJUMDAR
65
The Indian Boxing Story
97
A Brief History
116
A Socioeconomic Study of Kabadi
133
The Parsis and Jews in TwentiethCentury India
166
Cricket or Cricket Spectacle? Looking Beyond Cricket
197
Cricket Fiction and Fictional Cricket
213
Muslims Hindus and Indians during
239
Fabricating Consent over the IndoPak
277
Spectatorship Fandom and Nationalism in the South Asian
295
there is always change
328
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