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A unique contribution to the study of sport, this bibliography
contains more than 1300 citations of books, articles, documents,
unpublished theses, and other sources relating to the practice and
study of sport in Latin America from before the European conquest
to the present. The majority of the citations include annotations
designed to convey information about the contents, special
features, and interpretive or ideological thrust of the publication
listed. Selected studies of sport and recreation in the Iberian
peninsula and within the Hispanic communities of North America are
also included, along with 40 unannotated general and theoretical
studies which provide useful background information for those just
beginning their study of sport. Materials cited are written
principally in English, Spanish, and Portuguese, with some
selections in French, Italian, and German. Following an
introductory section on the theory and history of sport, the
bibliography is divided into six principal parts covering
indigenous traditions, the Iberian background of Latin American
sport, the colonial era, the national period, Hispanic sports in
the United States, and current Latin American sports periodicals.
The section on the national period is further subdivided by
country. In each section, the general criteria for inclusion was
that the work in question offer some analytical perspective or
contain material which would help to develop such a perspective. In
cases where historical or analytical studies were unavailable
technical manuals or rule books were included to demonstrate the
practice of certain sports and games in certain periods. Subject
and author indexes facilitate access to the main listings. As the
most comprehensive list of sources available on the subject of
Latin American sport, this volume will be indispensable to
researchers and students in the field.
A very exciting collection that explores sport in itself and also
as a cultural phenomenon. In unexpected ways, bicycles are linked
to modernization in Mexico, baseball takes on socialist overtones
in the Yucatan, and the political outlook in Cuba and Nicaragua is
explained in terms of their emphasis on sports. This reviewer
especially liked Lever's article on Brazil, in which she
demonstrates that sport helps complex modern societies cohere.
Spanning a time period from the turn of the century to the present,
the seven essays offer dramatic insights into Latin American
societies; Robert Levine's conclusion presents comparisons with
sports in the US. This new entry into the growing field of sport
and social analysis is highly recommended for college and
university libraries. Choice A collection of eight original essays
by distinguished scholars, this book examines the role of sports,
particularly soccer and baseball, in Latin America from the late
19th century to the present. The first study of its kind, Sport and
Society in Latin America vividly demonstrates the ways in which
sport can be used to study various historical and social processes
and expands our understanding of sport as a major form of social
behavior in Latin America. The contributors analyze the
relationship of sport to foreign penetration and cultural
imitation, urbanization and the rise of mass society, social
divisiveness and social integration, class conflict, politics, and
nationalism and revolution.
An impressive amount of literature, particularly literature on
soccer and baseball, has appeared since Joseph Arbena's 1989
bibliography, An Annotated Bibliography of Latin American Sport.
This new bibliography includes titles published during the past
decade as well as a few items omitted from the earlier
bibliography. Arranged topically, it includes sections on
indigenous traditions, Iberian background, the National Period in
Middle America and in South America, and Hispanic sports and
sportsmen in the United States.
Sport in Latin America and the Caribbean is the most comprehensive
overview to date of the development of modern sports in Latin
America. This new book illustrates how and why sport has become a
central part of the political, economic, and social life of the
region and the repercussions of its role. This highly readable
volume is composed of articles on a wide variety of
sports-basketball, baseball, volleyball, cricket, soccer, and
equestrian events-in countries and regions throughout Latin
America, including Mexico, the Caribbean, Costa Rica, Peru, Brazil,
Cuba, Nicaragua, and the Dominican Republic. Broad in scope, this
volume explores the definition of modern sport; whether sport is
enslaving, liberating, or neutral; if sport reflects or challenges
dominant culture; the attributes and drawbacks of professional
versus amateur sport; and the difference between sport in
capitalist and socialist nations. Other subjects that are addressed
as they pertain to modern sport include: diffusion and
globalization/internationalization; hegemony, dependency, and
nationalism; politics and the state; culture, ethnicity, and race;
economic class; gender; commercialization, modernization, and
professionalization; health, morality, crime and vice; economics
and labor productivity; and the media.
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