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Playing with the Big Boys
Lou Antolihao
其他書名
Basketball, American Imperialism, and Subaltern Discourse in the Philippines
出版
U of Nebraska Press
, 2015-05-01
主題
Sports & Recreation / Basketball
History / Asia / General
Sports & Recreation / Sociology of Sports
ISBN
0803255462
9780803255463
URL
http://books.google.com.hk/books?id=g60oDwAAQBAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
EBook
SAMPLE
註釋
Basketball has a lock on the Filipino soul. From big arenas in Manila to makeshift hoops in small villages, basketball is played by Filipinos of all walks of life and is used to mark everything from summer breaks for students to religious festivals and many other occasions.
Playing with the Big Boys
traces the social history of basketball in the Philippines from an educational and “civilizing” tool in the early twentieth century to its status as national pastime since the country gained independence after World War II.
While the phrase “playing with the big boys” describes the challenge of playing basketball against outsized opponents, it also describes the struggle for recognition that the Philippines, as a subaltern society, has had to contend with in its larger transnational relationships as a former U.S. colony.
Lou Antolihao goes beyond the empire-colony dichotomy by covering Filipino basketball in a wider range of comparisons, such as that involving the growing influence of Asia in its region, particularly China and Japan. In this context, Antolihao shows how Philippines basketball has moved from a vehicle for Americanization to a force for globalization in which the United States, while still a key player, is challenged by other basketball-playing countries.