The Pursuit of National Identity, International Recognition and Global Esteem
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Köp båda 2 för 2179 krJ.A.Mangan, FRHS, FRAI, D. Litt and emeritus Professor, Strathclyde University, UK, Founding Editor of IJHS and SGS and other Routledge journals has lectured world wide. Fellowships cover America, Africa, Australia and Europe including Berkeley, Oxford and Cambridge. Publications include three internationally acclaimed monographs: Athleticism in the Victorian and Edwardian Public School, The Games Ethic and Imperialism and 'Manufactured' Masculinity: Making Imperial Manliness, Morality and Militarism. Sandra Collins is an Assistant Professor of History of California State University-Chico, USA. An inaugural Post-Graduate Research Scholar of the International Olympic Committee, she is an author of the Missing Olympics and co-editor of Olympism. She has published on the Olympic Movement and sport in East Asia for over a decade. Gwang Ok is a professor of Exercise Science at Chungbuk National University in South Korea. He is also the Executive Director of Continuing Education for the university. Oks scholarship has focused on imperialism, nationalism and colonialism in modern Korean sport. He has published numerous articles on these topics, and the book, The Transformation of Modern Korean Sport: Imperialism, Nationalism, Globalization.
1. Preface - Korean Conjunction: A Meeting of East and West Prologue 2. The New Asia: Global Transformation, Regional Ascendancy and Metaphorical Modernity Part One - Emerging Asia: Sport as a Metaphor for Geopolitical Change 3. East Asian Olympic Desires: Identity on the Global Stage in the 1964 Tokyo, 1988 Seoul and 2008 Beijing Games 4. East Asian Olympics, Beijing 2008, and the Globalization of Sport 5. Catching Up: Understanding the Pursuit of Major Games by Rising Developmental States 6. A Comparative Analysis of the Olympic Impact in East Asia: From Japan, South Korea to China Part Two - The Asian Olympic Games: Nations, Nationalism and Internationalism 1964 Tokyo & 1998 Nagano 7. Phoenix Arisen: Japan as Peaceful Internationalist at the 1964 Tokyo Summer Olympics 8. Indeterminate Nationalism in the Last Twentieth Century Olympic Games, the 1998 Nagano Winter Olympics 1988 Seoul 9. From the Destruction of Image to the Reconstruction of Image: a Sports Mega-Event and the Resurgence of a Nation - the Politics of Sport Exemplified 10. Third Time Lucky!? PyeongChang's Bid to Host the 2018 Winter Olympics Politics, Policy and Practice 2008 Beijing 11. The Making of a Modest Mega-event: Hong Kong and the 2009 East Asian Games 12. Sociality of Losing? Speculations on the Beijing Olympics and Emergent Forms of Chinese Capitalism Epilogue 13. Asia Rising - Changing Circumstances and Shifting Successes: Sport as a Metonymy for Regional Renaissance