Circumventing Apartheid: Racial Politics and the Issue of South Africa's Olympic Participation at the 1984 Los Angeles Games

被引:9
作者
Llewellyn, Matthew [1 ]
机构
[1] Calif State Univ Fullerton, Dept Kinesiol, Fullerton, CA 92831 USA
关键词
constructive engagement; Olympic Games; South Africa; apartheid; boycott; BOYCOTT;
D O I
10.1080/09523367.2014.958664
中图分类号
K [历史、地理];
学科分类号
06 ;
摘要
Behind the shadows of an Olympiad replete with tales of Cold War acrimony and lavish commercial excess, emerges South Africa's bureaucratic attempt to achieve readmission to the Olympic Movement prior to the 1984 Los Angeles Games. In the backdrop of the Reagan administration's conciliatory policy of 'constructive engagement' towards Pretoria, the all-white South African National Olympic Committee aspired to cease its two-decade-long sporting isolation in the southern California metropolis. Drawing upon archival materials from the International Olympic Studies Center and public debates in the leading national and sporting newspapers and periodicals of the time, this paper will detail and analyse how International Olympic Committee president Juan Antonio Samaranch was forced to navigate a tight political tightrope over the South African issue. Any concession towards Pretoria would have likely agitated the African-bloc nations - a powerful constituency on the IOC with a proclivity for boycotting Olympic Games - as well as the global-nexus of anti-apartheid groups that vehemently opposed South Africa's participation in Los Angeles.
引用
收藏
页码:53 / 71
页数:19
相关论文
共 28 条
[1]  
Baker P., 1989, US S AFRICA REAGAN Y
[2]   Hitting apartheid for six? The politics of the South African sports boycott [J].
Booth, D .
JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY HISTORY, 2003, 38 (03) :477-+
[3]  
Booth Douglas., 1998, The Race Game: Sport and Politics in South Africa
[4]  
Borstelmann Thomas., 1993, APARTHEIDS RELUCTANT
[5]  
Culverson DonaldR., 1999, Contesting Apartheid: U.S. Activism
[6]  
Davis J. E., 2007, CONSTRUCTIVE ENGAGEM
[7]  
Gamble Andrew., 1988, The Free Economy and the Strong State: the politics of Thatcherism
[8]  
Green E.H.H., 2006, THATCHER
[9]  
Guttmann Allen., 1984, The Games Must Go On: Avery Brundage and the Olympic Movement
[10]  
Hill C.R., 1996, OLYMPIC POLITICS ATH, Vsecond