1st Edition

Cricket in Colonial India 1780 – 1947

By Boria Majumdar Copyright 2008
220 Pages
by Routledge

220 Pages
by Routledge

224 Pages
by Routledge

This is an exacting social history of Indian cricket between 1780 and 1947. It considers cricket as a derivative sport, creatively adapted to suit modern Indian socio-cultural needs, fulfil political imperatives and satisfy economic aspirations.  Majumdar argues that cricket was a means to cross class barriers and had a healthy following even outside the aristocracy and upper middle classes... Read more
Chapter 1 Royal Cricket: Self, State, Province and Nation; Chapter 2 Cricket in India: Representative Playing Fields to a Restrictive Preserve; Chapter 3 Crickhet in Colonial Bengal (1880–1947): A Lost History of Nationalism; Chapter 4 Cricket in Late Colonial Bengal (1930–47): A Story of Decline; Chapter 5 Cricket in Colonial Bombay: 1850–1940; Chapter 6 Communalism to Commercialism: The Bombay Pentangular 1892–1946; epilogue Epilogue;

Biography

Boria Majumdar, a Rhodes scholar, is research fellow at La Trobe University in Melbourne. He is Executive Editor of the Routledge journals Sport in Society and Soccer and Society and Joint General Editor of the Routledge Series, Sport in the Global Society. He is also visiting lecturer at the University of Chicago and a fellow of the International Olympic Museum at Lausanne, Switzerland. A well-known media figure on television, he has also written extensively for the Times of India, Outlook, Wisden and Anandabazar Patrika.

‘…a very good book…’ Outlook

 

‘… Boria Majumdar integrates the unfolding cricket story inextricably with that of the cultural/ political story within which the Indian game was and remains embedded. The empirical work is exhaustive, the interpretation well grounded…’ Biblio