1st Edition

Mapping an Empire of American Sport Expansion, Assimilation, Adaptation and Resistance

Edited By Mark Dyreson, J. A. Mangan, Roberta J. Park Copyright 2013
    256 Pages
    by Routledge

    250 Pages
    by Routledge

    Since the mid-nineteenth century, the United States has used sport as a vehicle for spreading its influence and extending its power, especially in the Western Hemisphere and around the Pacific Rim, but also in every corner of the rest of the world. Through modern sport in general, and through American pastimes such as baseball, basketball and the American variant of football in particular, the U.S. has sought to Americanize the globe’s masses in a long series of both domestic and foreign campaigns. Sport played roles in American programs of cultural, economic, and political expansion. Sport also contributed to American efforts to assimilate immigrant populations. Even in American games such as baseball and football, sport has also served as an agent of resistance to American imperial designs among the nations of the Western hemisphere and the Pacific Rim. As the twenty-first century begins, sport continues to shape American visions of a global empire as well as framing resistance to American imperial designs.

    Mapping an Empire of American Sport chronicles the dynamic tensions in the role of sport as an element in both the expansion of and the resistance to American power, and in sport’s dual role as an instrument for assimilation and adaptation.

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

    1. Prologue – The paradoxes of imitation and resistance: the origins of the map of an American empire of sports  Mark Dyreson  2. Imperial ‘deep play’: reading sport and visions of the five empires of the ‘New World’, 1919–1941  Mark Dyreson  3. Sporting Japanese-ness in an Americanised Japan  Sandra Collins  4. Baseball’s kakehashi: a bridge of understanding and the Nikkei experience  Samuel O. Regalado  5. Reason and magic in the country of baseball  John D. Kelly  6. The national pastime trade-off: how baseball sells US foreign policy and the American way  Robert Elias  7. American sports across the Americas  Joseph L. Arbena  8. The limits of Pan-Americanism: the case of the failed 1942 Pan-American Games  Cesar R. Torres  9. From la bomba to béisbol: sport and the Americanisation of Puerto Rico, 1898–1950  Roberta J. Park  10. ‘Changing the cultural landscape’: English engineers, American missionaries, and the YMCA bring sports to Brazil – the 1870s to the 1930s  Claudia Guedes  11. In pursuit of perspective: the other empire of sport – cultural imperialism for confident control and consequent legacies  J.A. Mangan  12. Epilogue – Imperial complexities: in pursuit of ‘provocative’ post-imperial analyses  J.A. Mangan

    Biography

    Mark Dyreson is Professor of Kinesiology and History at the Pennsylvania State University, an academic editor of the International Journal of the History of Sport, a former president of the North American Society for Sport History, and the author of several books on the history of sport.

    J.A. Mangan, Emeritus Professor, University of Strathclyde, FRHS, FRAI, D. Litt.l is Founding Editor of the International Journal of the History of Sport and the series Sport in the Global Society, author of the globally acclaimed Athleticism in the Victorian and Edwardian Public School, The Games Ethic and imperialism and ‘Manufacturing ‘Masculinity: Making Imperial Manliness, Morality and Militarism. He has authored and edited many studies of politics, culture, and sport.

    Roberta Park is Emeritus Professor University of California, Berkeley, former president of the American Academy of Kinesiology and Physical Education, vice president of the International Society for the History of Physical Education and Sport, and author of numerous historical articles.