Ethnicity, Sport, Identity

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athletes
Bantu Men's Social Centre
Bantu Men’s Social Centre
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Black Athlete
Black Male Athlete
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cricket
cultural identity formation
Curt Flood
Distinctively Canadian
education
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ethnic discrimination in athletics
Football Association
Garfield Sobers
Gary Sobers
indian
Indian Cricket
institutional discrimination sport
Japanese Sport
Johnson Jeffries Fight
Kapa Haka
Korean Ethnic Schools
Lala Amarnath
league
leagues
major
minority athlete experience
National High School Championship
National Sports Festival
negro
Non-accredited Schools
Palwankar Baloo
Permanent Alien Residents
physical
Physical Education
racial integration sport
Reserve Clause
social exclusion research
sports sociology studies
St Louis Cardinals
Test Match
West Indian Cricket
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780714684581
  • Weight: 650g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Feb 2004
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The struggle for status within sport is a microcosm of the struggle for rights, freedom and recognition within society. Injustices within sport often reflect larger injustices in society as a whole. In South Africa, for example, sport has been crucial in advancing the rights and liberty of oppressed groups. The geographical and chronological range of the essays in Ethnicity, Sport, Identity reveal the global role of sport in this advance.

The collection examines cases of discrimination directed at individuals or groups, resulting in their exclusion from full participation in sport and their consequent struggle for inclusion. It shows how ethnic and national identity are sources of social cohesion and political assertion within sport, and it illustrates the manner in which sport has served to project ethnicity in various, often contradictory ways. It depicts sport as an agent of conservatism and radicalism, superiority and subordination, confidence and lack of confidence, and as a source of disenfranchisement and enfranchisement. That sport has been, and continues to be, a potent means of both ethnic restriction and release can no longer be ignored.