1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games

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1984 Olympics
African NOCs
Amateur Elite Sport
Anabolic Steroids
anti-doping in athletics
apartheid
Blood Doping
California State University
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Cold War sport politics
commercialization
communism
cultural propaganda
Cycling Team
De Merode
doping
drugs in sport
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female athletes
global sporting identity
International Olympic Committee
IOC
IOC Executive Board
IOC Medical Commission
IOC Member
LAOOC
Los Angeles
Medical Commission
nationalism
NOCs
Olympic boycott
Olympic commercialisation
olympic games
Olympic Games political impact analysis
Olympic legacy
Olympic Movement
Pennsylvania State University
Peter Ueberroth
SANOC
South African Olympic Committee
South African Sport
sporting identity
sports infrastructure legacy
Summer Games
USOC
West Germany
Women's Marathon
women's marathon history
Women’s Marathon

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138085374
  • Weight: 370g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jun 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games stand as the most profitable and arguably the most important event in the history of the modern Olympic movement. Fresh off the back of the financially disastrous Montreal Games of 1976 and the politically controversial Moscow Games of 1980, the Olympic movement returned to the United States for the sixth time in an attempt to salvage the economic viability and global prestige of the Olympics. The Los Angeles Olympics proved to be both provocative and polarizing. On the one hand they have been heralded as an overwhelming, transformative success, ushering the Olympic movement into the modern commercial age. On the other hand, critics have repudiated the Games as a manifestation of commercial excess and a platform for western political and cultural propaganda.

In conjunction with the 30th anniversary of the Los Angeles Olympics, this volume examines their legacy. With an international collection of contributing scholars, this volume will span a range of global legacies, including the increasing commercialization of the Games, the changing participation of women, the Communist boycott movement, nationalism and sporting identity, and the modernization and California-cation of the Games. This book was originally published as a special issue of the International Journal of the History of Sport.

Matthew P. Llewellyn is an Associate Professor of Kinesiology at the California State University, Fullerton, USA. He is also co-Director of the Centre for the Socio-Cultural Sport and Olympic Research, assistant editor of the Journal of Sport History, and the author of numerous books and journal articles on the history of sport. John Gleaves is an Associate Professor of Kinesiology at the California State University, Fullerton, USA. He is also co-Director of the Centre for the Socio-Cultural Sport and Olympic Research, co-Director of the International Network for Humanistic Doping Research, and the author of numerous articles on the history and philosophy of sport. Wayne Wilson is vice president of communication and education at the LA84 Foundation, the co-editor of the anthology Doping in Elite Sport: The Politics of Drugs in the Olympic Movement, as well as the forthcoming Oxford Handbook of Sport History and the book series "Sport in World History."