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Marrow of the nation : a history of sport and physical culture in Republican China / Andrew D. Morris ; with a foreword by Joseph S. Alter.
LIBRA GV651 .M67 2004
Available from offsite location
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Morris, Andrew D.
- Series:
- Asia--local studies/global themes ; 10.
- Asia-Local studies/global themes ; 10
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Sports--China--History--20th century.
- Sports.
- Physical education and training--China--History--20th century.
- Physical education and training.
- Nationalism and sports--China.
- Nationalism and sports.
- History.
- China.
- Physical Description:
- xx, 368 pages, 10 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm.
- Place of Publication:
- Berkeley : University of California Press, [2004]
- Summary:
- By 1907. The Staff at the Tianjin Ymca Were rallying their charges with a series of questions: When will China be able to send a winning athlete to the Olympic contests? When will China be able to invite all the world to Peking for an International Olympic contest? Nearly a century later, on the eve of the first Olympic games ever to be held in China, this innovative book establishes the crucial role played by sporting culture and ideology in the making of the modern nation-state in Republican China.0A landmark work on the history of sport in China, Marrow of the Nation tells the dramatic story of how Olympic-style competitions and ball games as well as militarized forms of training associated with the West and Japan were borrowed and adapted to become an integral part of the modern Chinese experience in the first half of the twentieth century. Andrew Morris draws from popular and scholarly sources that have never been seen by Western scholars, and his interviews with Chinese athletes who took part in such events as the 1936 Berlin Olympics add an important and fascinating dimension to his study. Morris also investigates the role of the martial arts tradition as an essentially "Chinese" element in the development of China's physical culture. Relating the history of sport and physical culture to questions of nationalism, race, capitalism, consumerism, imperialism, the body, discipline, and gender, Morris reveals the critical role of tiyu, or "body cultivation," in any understanding of modern Chinese social and cultural history.
- Contents:
- 2. "Now the Fun of Exercise Can be Realized": From Calisthenics and Gymnastics Ticao to Sports Tiyu in the 1910s 17
- 3. "Mind, Muscle, and Money": A Physical Culture for the 1920s 47
- 4. Nationalism and Power in the Physical Culture of the 1920s 77
- 5. "We can also be the Controllers and Oppressors": Social Bodies and National Physiques 100
- 6. Elite Competitive Sport in the 1930s 141
- 7. From Martial Arts to National Skills: The Construction of a Modern Indigenous Physical Culture, 1912-37 185
- 8. Tiyu Through Wartime and "Liberation" 230.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 301-338) and index.
- ISBN:
- 0520240847
- OCLC:
- 54280114
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