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Beyond the Final Score

Cha, Victor D.

Beyond the Final Score

The 2008 Beijing Olympics will be remembered as the largest, most expensive, and most widely watched event of the modern Olympic era. But did China take advantage of this golden public relations opportunity to present itself as a responsible host and an emergent international power, much like Japan during the 1964 Tokyo Games and Korea during the 1988 Seoul Games? Or did Beijing in 2008 act more like Berlin in 1936, when Germany took advantage of the global spotlight to promote its political ideology at home and abroad? Beyond the Final Score is one of the first books to look at what took place during the 2008 Beijing games within the context of the politics of sport in Asia. Asian athletics are bound up with notions of national identity and nationalism, refracting political intent and the process of globalization. Sporting events can generate diplomatic breakthroughs (as with the results of Nixon and Mao's "ping-pong diplomacy") or breakdowns (as when an athlete defects to another country), and they often force a country to modernize its transportation, tourist, and environmental infrastructures. For China, the Beijing Games introduced a liberalizing ethos that its authoritative regime could ignore only at its peril. Victor D. Cha-former director of Asian affairs for the White House-evaluates Beijing's contention with this pressures considering the intense scrutiny China already faced on issues of counterproliferation, global warming, and free trade. He begins with the theoretical arguments tying Asian sport to international affairs and follows with an explanation of athletics and identity, diplomacy, and transformation. Enhanced by Cha's remarkable facility with the history and politics of sport, Beyond the Final Score will stand as the definitive examination of the significance of events-both good and bad-that took place during the Beijing Olympics.

CHF 149.00

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ISBN 9780231154901
Sprache eng
Cover Fester Einband
Verlag Columbia University Press
Jahr 20081230

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