Cricket in Colonial India 1780 – 1947

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A01=Boria Majumdar
Army Sports Control Board
Author_Boria Majumdar
Bengali Cricket
bombay
Bombay Cricket
Bombay Pentangular
brabourne
Brabourne Stadium
Calcutta Cricket Club
Calcutta Football League
Category=JBCC
Category=SFD
clubs
colonial sport history
commercialisation of games
Communal Cricket
communalism in sport
cricket and Indian society transformation
Cricket Association
Cricket Club
Cricket Patronage
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eq_isMigrated=1
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
eq_sports-fitness
Football Association
Hindu Gymkhana
ICC Champion Trophy
IFA
IFA Shield
indian
Indian Cricket
Indian nationalism studies
Mohun Bagan Club
pentangular
postcolonial cultural identity
ranji
Ranji Trophy
scheme
social stratification analysis
stadium
Stadium Scheme
team
Test Match
Test Matches
trophy
TRPS.
Women's Cricket
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415400145
  • Weight: 570g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 02 May 2008
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This is an exacting social history of Indian cricket between 1780 and 1947. It considers cricket as a derivative sport, creatively adapted to suit modern Indian socio-cultural needs, fulfil political imperatives and satisfy economic aspirations. Majumdar argues that cricket was a means to cross class barriers and had a healthy following even outside the aristocracy and upper middle classes well over a century ago. Indeed, in some ways, the democratization of the sport anticipated the democratization of the Indian polity itself.

Boria Majumdar reveals the appropriation, assimilation and subversion of cricketing ideals in colonial and post-colonial India for nationalist ends. He exposes a sport rooted in the contingencies of the colonial and post-colonial context of nineteenth- and twentieth-century India. Cricket, to put it simply, is much more than a ‘game’ for Indians.

This study describes how the genealogy of their intense engagement with cricket stretches back over a century. It is concerned not only with the game but also with the end of cricket as a mere sport, with Indian cricket’s commercial revolution in the 1930s, with ideals and idealism and their relative unimportance, with the decline of morality for reasons of realpolitik, and with the denunciation, once and for all, of the view that sport and politics do not mix.

This book was previously published as a special issue of the International Journal of the History of Sport

Boria Majumdar, a Rhodes scholar, is research fellow at La Trobe University in Melbourne. He is Executive Editor of the Routledge journals Sport in Society and Soccer and Society and Joint General Editor of the Routledge Series, Sport in the Global Society. He is also visiting lecturer at the University of Chicago and a fellow of the International Olympic Museum at Lausanne, Switzerland. A well-known media figure on television, he has also written extensively for the Times of India, Outlook, Wisden and Anandabazar Patrika.

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