The Whole World Was Watching: Sport in the Cold War
The Whole World Was Watching: Sport in the Cold War
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Abstract
The master narrative of Cold War sports describes a two-sided surrogate war, measurable by falsely objective medal counts every four years at the Olympic Games. This approach is as inadequate for sports as it is for the Cold War. Rather than a bipolar, superpower conflict, the Cold War was a competition between the dueling globalization projects of capitalism and Communism composed of far-from-monolithic blocs. While a fragile, fearful peace took shape in the Northern Hemisphere, both sides waged proxy wars that killed tens of millions in the Global South. Alongside other forms of popular culture, sports were deployed to win the sympathies of the world’s citizens, many of them from nations that had emerged in the wake of European decolonization. Sport was the most conspicuous form of popular culture in the period. It offered millions around the world the opportunity to forge identities that both supported and undermined dominant ideologies—racial, gender, local, regional, national, and international. Sport crossed rather than created borders and identities—and it did so in myriad and intricate ways. This book brings together experts working on sports in the United States, USSR, German Democratic Republic, Asia, and the postcolonial world. Their work is theoretically aware and underpinned by extensive archival research. Taken together, they go beyond simple notions of bipolarity and present new insights that should invigorate the study of both international systems and of culture in the Cold War period.
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Front Matter
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Introduction
Explaining Cold War Sport
Robert Edelman andChristopher Young
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Part I The United States
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Part II The Soviet Union
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3
Breaking the Ice: Alexei Kosygin and the Secret Background of the 1972 Hockey Summit Series
James Hershberg
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4
Action in the Era of Stagnation: Leonid Brezhnev and the Soviet Olympic Dream
Mikhail Prozumenshikov
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5
Soccer Artistry and the Secret Police: Georgian Football in the Multiethnic Soviet Empire
Erik R. Scott
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6
Russian Fever Pitch: Global Fandom, Youth Culture, and the Public Sphere in the Late Soviet Union
Manfred Zeller
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3
Breaking the Ice: Alexei Kosygin and the Secret Background of the 1972 Hockey Summit Series
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Part III German Democratic Republic
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7
Eulogy to Theft: Berliner FC Dynamo, East German Football, and the End of Communism
Alan McDougall
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8
Sports, Politics, and “Wild Doping” in the East German Sporting “Miracle”
Mike Dennis
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9
“The Most Beautiful Face of Socialism”: Katarina Witt and the Sexual Politics of Sport in the Cold War
Annette F. Timm
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7
Eulogy to Theft: Berliner FC Dynamo, East German Football, and the End of Communism
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Part IV Asia
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10
Learning from the Soviet Big Brother: The Early Years of Sport in the People’s Republic of China
Amanda Shuman
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11
“The Communist Bandits Have Been Repudiated”: Cold War–Era Sport in Taiwan
Andrew D. Morris
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12
New Regional Order: Sport, Cold War Culture, and the Making of Southeast Asia
Simon Creak
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10
Learning from the Soviet Big Brother: The Early Years of Sport in the People’s Republic of China
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Part V The Post colonial
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End Matter
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