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Sport, Racism And Ethnicity Grant Jarvie

Sport, Racism And Ethnicity By Grant Jarvie

Sport, Racism And Ethnicity by Grant Jarvie


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Summary

Considers racism experienced by athletes in South Africa, the Caribbean, Canada and the USA as well as in Britain. The contributors examine topics such as how cricket in the Caribbean has stimulated national and racial self-consciousness and to what extent women are accommodated in sport in Canada.

Sport, Racism And Ethnicity Summary

Sport, Racism And Ethnicity by Grant Jarvie

First Published in 1991. Over the past decade there has been a notable growth of interest in the study of sport in the contexts of race and ethnicity. A number of developments have contributed to stimulate this interest, but three sets of considerations appear to have been of decisive importance. First, black sportsmen and sportswomen have experienced remarkable successes in international sport. Second, such a disproportionately high level of athletic participation by various ethnic minority cultures has often been used by liberal-minded sports enthusiasts to presume that sport enjoys a certain degree of democratisation and equality. Third, that in certain areas of the world sport itself has been central to struggles of popular resistance against dominant groups. The papers in this volume not only consider the racisms experienced by various ethnic minority sportsmen and sportswomen in Britain, but also the way in which various racisms have been articulated in South Africa, the Caribbean, Canada and the United States. The following are indicative of the key issues addressed by this text: the extent to which cricket has stimulated the role of nationalist and racial self-consciousness in the Caribbean; the extent to which young black Afro-Caribbean sports-people are agents of racialised social control in Britain; the contribution of sport to popular struggles in South Africa; the experience of young children of South Asian origin of sport in Britain; and the extent to which Native American women are accommodated in sport in Canada. This book sets out to challenge many of the voluntarist racist cherished beliefs surrounding sport.

About Grant Jarvie

Grant Jarvie lectures at the University of Warwick. He is author of the books Class, Race and Sport in South Africa's Political Economy (1985) and Highland Games: The Making of the Myth (1991). He has taught in both physical education and sociology departments within various institutions. He gained his PhD in sociology from the University of Leicester.

Table of Contents

Introduction Sport, Racism and Ethnicity, Grant Jarvie; Chapter 1 Cricket, Carnival and Street Culture in the Caribbean, Richard D.E. Burton; Chapter 2 Chapter 2 Sport, Schooling and Asian Male Youth Culture, Scott Fleming; Chapter 3 Chapter 3Sport, Racism and Young Women, Lovell Tessa; Chapter 4 Chapter 4 Sport Festivals and Race Relations in the Northwest Territories of Canada, Vicky Paraschak; Chapter 5 Chapter 5 Sport, Racism and British Society: A Sociological Study of England's Elite Male Afro/Caribbean Soccer and Rugby Union Players, Joe Maguire; Chapter 6 Chapter 6 Athletics and Academics: Contrary or Complementary Activities?, Othello Harris; Chapter 7 Chapter 7 Sport and the Black Experience, Jose Parry, Noel Parry; Chapter 8 Chapter 8 Sport, Popular Struggle and South African Culture, Grant Jarvie; Notes on Contributors Author Index Subject Index;

Additional information

GOR006838203
9781850009160
1850009163
Sport, Racism And Ethnicity by Grant Jarvie
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Taylor & Francis Ltd
19910515
216
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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