1st Edition

Sports in African History, Politics, and Identity Formation

Edited By Michael J. Gennaro, Saheed Aderinto Copyright 2019
    266 Pages
    by Routledge

    266 Pages
    by Routledge

    Sports in African History, Politics, and Identity Formation explores how sports can render a key to unlocking complex social, political, economic, and gendered relations across Africa and the Diaspora.

    Sports hold significant value and have an intricate relationship with many components of African societies throughout history. For many Africans, sports are a way of life, a site of cultural heroes, a way out of poverty and social mobility, and a site for leisurely play. This book focuses on the many ways in which sports uniquely reflect changing cultural trends at diverse levels of African societies. The contributors detail various sports, such as football, cricket, ping pong, and rugby, across the continent to show how sports lay at the heart of the discourse of nationalism, self-fashioning, gender and masculinity, leisure and play, challenges of underdevelopment, and ideas of progress.

    Bringing together the newest and most innovative scholarship on African sports, this book will be of interest to students and scholars of contemporary Africa, African history, culture and society, and sports history and politics.

    Introduction
    Michael Gennaro and Saheed Aderinto 

    Part 1: Region-Based Essays 

    West and Central Africa 

    1. "I Was Really Disgusted at Seeing Healthy Young Boys Playing Ping Pong": Ping-Pong and Masculinity in Post–World War II Nigeria
    Michael Gennaro 

    2. Pas de Deux as I Tell You: Physical Education, Dance, and the Remaking of Discipline in World War II Brazzaville
    Danielle Porter Sanchez 

    3. Cameroonian Cricket: The Interface between Local and Dominant Colonial Ideologies
    Joanne Clarke 

    4. Political Action in Sports Development Under the National Liberation Council (NLC) Era in Ghana
    Kwame Adum-Kyeremeh 

    5. "The Best of the Best": The Politicization of Sports under Ghana’s Supreme Military Council
    Humphrey Asamoah Agyekum 

    Southern Africa 

    6. "We Have Material Second to None": Colored Sportsmen and Masculine Competition in the South African Press, 1936–1960
    Cody S. Perkins 

    7. Playing Away from Home: The Nature of Soccer Integration in South Africa, 1978–1984
    Gustav Venter 

    8. Examining Physical Culture in a Local Context
    Francois Cleophas 

    9. "Visionary Courtyard Players": The Robben Island Rugby Board and the Transition to Post-Apartheid South Africa, c. 1972–1992
    Hendrik Snyders 

    10. The Birth of the Springboks: How Early International Rugby Matches Unified White Cultural Identity in South Africa
    Zachary R. Bigalke 

    11. A Tale of Two Sports Fields: Contested Spaces, Histories, and Identities at Play in Rural South Africa
    Tarminder Kaur 

    North and East Africa

    12. The Bulldog, the Pharaoh, and Football: British Imperialism and Egypt’s National Sport and Identity, 1882–1934
    Christopher Ferraro 

    13. Sports and Physical Education in Ethiopia during the Italian Occupation, 1936–1941
    Tamirat Gebremariam and Benoit Gaudin 

    Part 2: Theme-Based Essays 

    Diaspora and the Economic and International Dimension 

    14. Commercialization of Football in Africa: Prospects, Challenges, and Experiences
    Manase Chiweshe 

    15. Islam and the Foreign Other: Representing the Alterity of Hakeem Olajuwon
    Munene Mwaniki 

    16. Afro-Orientalism in the Global Village: Media Imaginations of South Africa and Africa in the Coverage of the 2010 World Cup
    Shepherd Mpofu 

    Biography

    Michael J. Gennaro is Assistant Professor of History at Bossier Parish Community College, USA.

    Saheed Aderinto is Associate Professor of History at Western Carolina University, USA.