The Cold War spanned some five decades from the devastation that remained after World War Two until the fall of the Berlin wall, and for much of that time the perception was that only on the Eastern side were politics and sport inextricably linked. However, this assumption underestimates the extent to which sport was an important symbol for both power blocs in their ongoing ideological struggle.This collection of essays from leading international authorities on sport, culture and ideology brings together an impressive body of work organized around key political themes and outstanding moments in sport, and is at once a political history of sport and an illuminating new perspective on the forces that shaped this unsettled time.
Les mer
This is a collection of essays on the symbolic role of sport in the delicate interplay of the superpowers during the Cold War, showing how sport and politics became inextricably intertwined.
Introduction 1. Totalitarian Regimes and Cold War Sport: Steroid ‘Übermenschen’ and ‘Ball Bearing Females’ 2. Verbal Gymnastics: The Soviet Sports Administration and the Decision to Enter the Olympic Games, 1947-1952 3. Cold War Expatriot Sport: Symbolic Resistance - and International Response - in Hungarian Water Polo at the Melbourne Olympics, 1956 4. Cold War Football: British-European Encounters in the 1940s and 50s 5. ‘Oscillating Antagonism’: Soviet-British Athletics Relations, 1945-1960 6. ‘If You Want the Girl Next Door….’ Olympic Sport and the Popular Press in Early Cold War Britain 7. The ‘Muscle Gap’: Physical Education and U.S. Fears of a Depleted Masculinity 1954-63 8. Good Versus Evil? Drugs, Sport and the Cold War 9. The Cold War and the (Re) Articulation of Canadian National Identity: The 1972 Canada-USSR Summit Series 10. ‘One Day When the Yankees….’ Cuban Baseball, the United States and the Cold War 11. Playing the ‘Race Card’: US Foreign Policy and the Integration of Sports 12. ‘Miraculous’ Masculinity Meets Militarization: Narrating the 1980 USSR-US Men’s Olympic Ice Hockey Match and Cold War Politics 13. The Soviet Union and the Olympic Games of 1980 and 1984: Explaining the Boycott to their Own People 14. ‘Sport and Politics Don’t Mix’. China's Relationship with the IOC during the Cold War 15. Sport After the Cold War: Implications for Russia and Eastern Europe 16. Performing America’s Past: Cold War Fantasies in a Perpetual State of War 17. ‘Yankee Go Home’: Sport and Anti-Americanism in South Korea
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780415359276
Publisert
2006-11-21
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
650 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
352

Biographical note

Stephen Wagg is Reader in Sport and Society at Leeds Metropolitan University, UK.
David L. Andrews is Associate Professor in Sport, Commerce and Culture at the University of Maryland, USA.