ABSTRACT

Bringing together leading international writers on cricket and society, this important new book places cricket in the postcolonial life of the major Test-playing countries. Exploring the culture, politics, governance and economics of cricket in the twenty-first century, this book dispels the age-old idea of a gentle game played on England's village greens.

This is an original political and historical study of the game's development in a range of countries and covers:

* cricket in the new Commonwealth: Sri Lanka, Pakistan, the Caribbean and India
* the cricket cultures of Australia, New Zealand and post-apartheid South Africa
* cricket in England since the 1950s.

This new book is ideal for students of sport, politics, history and postcolonialism as it provides stimulating and comprehensive discussions of the major issues including race, migration, gobalization, neoliberal economics, the media, religion and sectarianism.

 

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

Following on

part I|67 pages

Cricket and the former dominions

chapter 1|19 pages

Unity, difference and the ‘national game’

Cricket and Australian national identity 1

chapter 2|20 pages

Kiwi or English?

Cricket on the margins of New Zealand national identity 1

chapter 3|26 pages

‘No one in Dolly's class at present?’

Cricket and national identity in post-apartheid South Africa

part II|102 pages

Cricket in the New Commonwealth

chapter 4|16 pages

Play together, live apart

Religion, politics and markets in Indian cricket since 1947

chapter 5|15 pages

History without a past

Memory and forgetting in Indian cricket

chapter 6|21 pages

Cricket in ‘a nation imperfectly imagined’

Identity and tradition in postcolonial Pakistan

chapter 7|26 pages

Sri Lanka

The power of cricket and the power in cricket 1

chapter 8|18 pages

One eye on the ball, one eye on the world

Cricket, West Indian nationalism and the spirit of C. L. R. James

part III|86 pages

Cricket in the Old Country

chapter 9|22 pages

Calypso kings, dark destroyers

England–West Indies Test cricket and the English press, 1950–1984

chapter 10|18 pages

‘A carnival of cricket?’

The Cricket World Cup, ‘race’ and the politics of carnival

chapter 11|10 pages

Sheffield Caribbean

The story of a Yorkshire cricket club

chapter 12|16 pages

Clean bowl racism?

Inner-city London and the politics of cricket development

chapter 13|14 pages

The ambush clause

Globalisation, corporate power and the governance of world cricket