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`Boria Majumdar has been able to free cricket history, allowing the sport to transcend volumes of mere facts and figures, revealing a world of significance and intrigue, of politics and passion.` -- Peter Hutton, Vice President, Ten Sports
`Boria Majumdar...demonstrates an original mind and gives evidence of an intellectual enerty that has no parallel. He dominates his chosen academic field and this magnificently rich volume is testimony why.` -- J A Mangan, Director, International Research Centre for Sport, Socializating and Society, De Montfort University
In his personal scholarship and his many editorial projects, Boria Majumdar is doing more than anyone in the world today to bring into being a truly international, post-colonial sport history.` --John J Macaloon, Professor, Social Sciences Graduate Division, University of Chicago
When Bhuvan compared cricket to gilli danda in Lagaan, many laughed. But cricket was indeed referred to as gilli danda in India in the lat e nineteenth century. When, in 1893, the villagers of Champaner played cricket in their dhotis they presented a very incongruous picture to the contemporary viewer. Even as late as 1931, Indians donned dhotis to assert their national identity when playing against the English. Replete with accounts of such fascinating stories, anecdotes, and information from primary sources, this book is a must read for cricket enthusiasts.
Indian cricket is, however, more than the sum of its lore. In contemporary India, it encompasses many dimensions of experience involving politics, gender, religion, and class. This Reader set out to explore the unique bond between cricket and the Indian nation, now more than a century-and-a half old.
Many interesting facts and anecdotes find place in this volume: original accounts of the evolution of the game in Bengal, Bombay, Karachi, and Rajputana as well as in other parts of the subcontinent the nature of patronage the game has enjoyed over the years Lala Amarnath`s controversial ouster from the team in 1936 the story of cricket`s commercialization vernacular writings on the game, and much more. It demonstrates that any attempt to understand the nature of social relations and cultural identities in modern India must necessarily consider the role and significance of cricket.
This volume is a testimony to the power of cricket--more than any other sport in the country--to intoxicate and infuriate, to cheer and frustrate, to break hearts and mend fences, and to fuel conflict and promote peace.
Invaluable for anyone interested in Indian cricket as well as for academics, cricket enthusiasts, Cricket Associations, and scholars of social and cultural history.
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