- Beyond a Boundary
Resource Type: Book Published: 1983 Part memoir of a boyhood in a black colony (by one of the founders of African nationalism), part passionate celebration of the game of cricket, this book raises serious questions about race, class, politics, and the realities of colonial oppression.
- Brock University
Media Profile in Sources Resource Type: Organization
- Fifty years ago, Cassius Clay shook up the world by winning the heavyweight title and
Resource Type: Article Published: 2014 The victory of the underdog who became Muhammad Ali and how it wasn't just sport's hierarchies that were rocked by it. On the night of February 25, 1964, the 22 year old Cassius Clay defeated the supposedly undefeatable Sonny Liston to become the Heavyweight Champion of the World.
- International Workers' Olympiads
Wikipedia article Resource Type: Article International Workers' Olympiads were an international sporting event arranged between 1925 and 1937 by Socialist Workers' Sport International (SASI). It was an organisation supported by social democratic parties and International Federation of Trade Unions. Workers' Olympiads were an alternate event for the Olympic Games. The participants were members of various labor sports associations and came mostly from Europe. The Workers' Olympiads were created as a counterweight for the Olympic Games, which were criticized for being confined for the upper social classes and privileged people. The international workers' sports movement did not believe that the true Olympic spirit could be achieved in an Olympic movement dominated by the aristocratic leadership. Pierre de Coubertin, founder of the International Olympic Committee, had always opposed women's participation and supported the cultural superiority of white Europeans over other races. His followers, Henri de Baillet-Latour and Avery Brundage, were openly anti-semitic and both collaborated with the Nazis. On the contrary, the Workers' Olympiads opposed all kinds of chauvinism, sexism, racism and social exclusiveness. The Olympic Games were based in rivalry between the nations, but the Workers' Olympiads stressed internationalism, friendship, solidarity and peace.
- Nazi Olympics
Resource Type: Book Published: 1987 Describes the Nazification of sports in Germany in the 1930s and its broader context.
- Net Worth
Exploding The Myths of Pro Hockey Resource Type: Book Published: 1991
- Other Voices: The Connexions Newsletter - August 13, 2016
Sports and Politics Resource Type: Serial Publication (Periodical) Published: 2016 Sports and politics have always been intertwined, though perhaps never as much so as in the current era. In the modern sports era, survival and success depend largely on the favour of corporations, whose power to provide or withhold funding and sponsorships now shape every aspect of sport, including athletes' incomes and lifestyles. It is now difficult to remember that only a few decades ago, corporate logos were strictly forbidden at Olympic events, while athletes were prohibited from accepting any kind of payment for their involvement in sports. The corporate conquest of sports closely parallels the corporate colonization of nearly all aspects of modern life. Accompanying this in recent years has been the increasing injection of militaristic content into sports spectacles. In Canada, hockey games are now commonly preceded by rituals honouring militarism. In the United States, similar spectacles have been staged for years. In this issue, we feature resources which remind us that resistance to the commercialization, corporatization, and militarization of sports is also part of our heritage.
- Power Games: A Political History of the Olympic Games
Resource Type: Book Published: 2016
- Red Sport International
Wikipedia article Resource Type: Article The International Association of Red Sports and Gymnastics Associations, commonly known as Red Sport International (RSI) or Sportintern was a Comintern-supported international sports organization established in July 1921. The RSI was established in an effort to form a rival organization to already existing "bourgeois" and social democratic international sporting groups. The RSI held 3 summer games and 1 winter games called "Spartakiad" in competition with the Olympic games of the International Olympic Committee before being dissolved in 1937.
- Socialist Workers' Sport International
Wikipedia article Resource Type: Article Socialist Workers' Sport International (German: Sozialistische Arbeitersport Internationale, SASI) was an international socialist sporting organisation, based in Lucerne. It was founded in 1920, and consisted of six national federations (with a combined membership of about one million) at the time of its founding.
- Sport, Peace and Development: International Worker Sport 1913-2013
A festschrift book in honour of International Workers and Amateurs in Sports Confederation (CSIT) Resource Type: Book Published: 2013 Sport is seen to play an important role as a promoter for peace and social integration in different geographical, cultural and political contexts.
- Sports and Politics
Introduction to the August 13, 2016 issue of Other Voices Resource Type: Article Published: 2016 Sports in general, and the Olympics in particular, have never been free of politics. Allegations of bribery and cheating had already been part of the Olympics for centuries before that noteworthy day in 67 AD when the judges proclaimed the Emperor Nero winner of the Olympic chariot race even though he had been thrown from his chariot and failed to complete the race.
- The Struggle For Canadian Sport
Resource Type: Book Published: 1997 Bruce Kidd, a former track star, documents the development and transformation of Canadian sport in the twentieth century.
- The White Man in That Photo
Resource Type: Article Published: 2015 Sometimes photographs deceive. Take this one, for example. It represents John Carlos and Tommie Smith's rebellious gesture the day they won medals for the 200 meters at the 1968 Summer Olympics in Mexico City, and it certainly deceived me for a long time.
- The World Cup and the Corporatization of Soccer
Resource Type: Article Published: 2014 Huge global sporting contests, their boosters promise, will transform the nature of the host country. The billions South Africa poured into hosting the World Cup were touted by some as a form of development. The result? The month-long euphoria of the contests was followed by the hangover of dealing with an expensive unused or underused stadium infrastructure scattered across that developing country. Host countries pay FIFA for the privilege of hosting the competition, then foot the bill for most of the tournament, while FIFA takes most of the revenues.
- Years of Glory 1942-1967
The National Hockey League's Official Book of the Six-Team Era Resource Type: Book Published: 1994
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