1st Edition

Leisure, Culture and the Olympic Games

Edited By John Horne Copyright 2014
124 Pages
by Routledge

126 Pages
by Routledge

128 Pages
by Routledge

This edited collection contains six refreshing critical assessments of the leisure-sport relationship from societies that have staged the Olympic and Paralympic Games and contains valuable information for those who live in societies that aspire to host the Games. The collection begins and ends with discussions of the Olympic Games as a platform for protest. The first and last chapters consider... Read more

1. Introduction: Leisure, culture and the Olympic games  2. Retrospective reflections on the Black American male athlete and the 1968 Olympics: an elite interview with Dr Harry Edwards  3. The sociocultural legacy of the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games  4. Complex context: Aboriginal participation in hosting the Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympic and Paralympic Games  5. Beyond the Games: regeneration legacies and London 2012  6. A vision of London in the twenty-first century or just terrifying monsters: a semiotic analysis of the official mascots for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games  7. The Olympics as a platform for protest: a case study of the London 2012 ‘ethical’ Games and the Play Fair campaign for workers’ rights

Biography

John Horne is Professor of Sport and Sociology in the School of Sport, Tourism and The Outdoors, University of Central Lancashire. He is the author and co-author of numerous articles, book chapters and books including Sport in Consumer Culture (2006), Understanding Sport: A Socio-Cultural Analysis (2013) and Understanding the Olympics (2012) and co-editor of Sports Mega-Events (2006).