Introduction to Olympic Movement

Introduction to Olympic Movement

Author: Dr. Mandeep Singh Nathial

Publisher: Friends Publications India

Published: 2020-06-13

Total Pages: 132

ISBN-13: 9388457811

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The purpose of the book is to provide adequate text material for the students. The book is divided into four units, i.e., Origin of Olympic Movement, Modern Olympic Games, Different Olympic Games and Committees of Olympic Games. The book is written in a simple and easy language.


Olympism

Olympism

Author: United States Olympic Committee

Publisher: Gareth Stevens Publishing

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780836828009

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Provides information about the background, meaning, and purpose of the Olympic Games and includes up-to-date information on every Olympic sport.


The Olympic Games Explained

The Olympic Games Explained

Author: Vassil Girginov

Publisher: Psychology Press

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 292

ISBN-13: 9780415346047

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This new student textbook explores the history and meaning of the modern Olympic Games, providing a comprehensive overview of 'Olympism' from the Ancient Greeks origins through to the beginnings of the International Olympic Committee.


Encyclopedia of the Modern Olympic Movement

Encyclopedia of the Modern Olympic Movement

Author: John E. Findling

Publisher: Greenwood

Published: 2004

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9780275976590

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This unique book provides information on the events surrounding the Olympics, such as political controversies, scandals, tragedies, economic issues, and peripheral incidents.


The Olympic Games Explained

The Olympic Games Explained

Author: Vassil Girginov

Publisher: Psychology Press

Published: 2005

Total Pages: 296

ISBN-13: 9780415346030

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This student textbook explores the history and meaning of the modern Olympic Games, providing a comprehensive overview of 'Olympism' from the Ancient Greeks origins through to the beginnings of the International Olympic Committee.


A Political History Of The Olympic Games

A Political History Of The Olympic Games

Author: David B Kanin

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2019-08-19

Total Pages: 219

ISBN-13: 0429724314

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The turmoil surrounding the 1980 Olympic Games, says the author, was nothing new--it was merely the most recent, and most complex, manifestation of the political content of modern sport. Despite the mythology perpetrated by Olympic publicists, the modern Olympic Games were founded with expressly political goals in mind and continue to thrive on tie


The 1906 Olympic Games

The 1906 Olympic Games

Author: Bill Mallon

Publisher: McFarland

Published: 2009-03-10

Total Pages: 251

ISBN-13: 0786440678

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One of the early concepts of the Olympic Games was to include "intercalated" Games every four years between the normal cycle, and to hold these Games in Athens, the ancestral home of the Olympics. In 1906 the first, and only one, of these games was held. Occurring only two years after the St. Louis Games of 1904 and two years before the London Games of 1908, the Athens Games were considered by many not to be "official"; social and political forces prevented continuation of the intercalation cycle in 1910 and later. Yet these Games were surprisingly successful and helped guarantee the survival of the modern Olympics. This book, fourth in the series on the early Olympics, presents all the data on 29 nation and city-state participants in more than a dozen events in the Athens Games. Scores and descriptions are provided, and many historical errors and omissions in other sources are corrected. Appendices include the published program for the Games, the actual schedule followed during the Games, and country-by country listings of all participating athletes.


The Origins of the Olympic Games

The Origins of the Olympic Games

Author: Andras Patay-Horvath

Publisher: Archaeolingua

Published: 2015-08-31

Total Pages: 156

ISBN-13: 9789639911727

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Even in antiquity it was debated when and why the Olympic Games had been established and by whom. Modern scholarship has also advanced a great number of hypotheses on the origins of the games (ranging from funeral games to harvest ceremonies/vegetation magic or even initiation rites), but a truly convincing reconstruction has not yet been formulated. The present volume off ers a new comprehensive explanation for the phenomenon and argues that the Games evolved from hunting and from animal ceremonialism observed among various hunting groups. This explanation is admittedly a hypothetical one, based mainly on the interpretation of the archaeological material and some ethnographic parallels, but conjecture is necessary due to the complete absence of contemporary written evidence. In addition, although it is essentially a simple theory that simultaneously explains many perplexing features of the Games in a coherent way, it must remain without definitive proof, as with all other previous similar explanations. "Anyone who takes issue is allowed a simple remedy: to off er something better, something that is coherent and constructive as an alternative."


The Olympics

The Olympics

Author: Allen Guttmann

Publisher: University of Illinois Press

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 254

ISBN-13: 9780252070464

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Traces the history of the modern Olympics from 1896 to 2000, contrasting the ideal of the game with the often politicized reality.


Bearing Light: Flame Relays and the Struggle for the Olympic Movement

Bearing Light: Flame Relays and the Struggle for the Olympic Movement

Author: John J. Macaloon

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2013-10-31

Total Pages: 208

ISBN-13: 1317968905

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In recent decades, five to ten times as many persons have turned out for the Olympic flame relay as have watched Olympic sports contests live. Flame Relays and the Struggle for the Olympic Movement: Bearing Light, the first anthropological analysis of the contemporary torch relay, exposes and interprets the transformation of the ritual across a 25-year period, from Los Angeles 1984 through the IOC’s 2009 announcement that, in the aftermath of the politically contentious Beijing performance, there will be no more global relays. This volume offers a rare case study of continuity and change in a leading transnational and trans-cultural ritual form. Through data publicly revealed for the first time, the reader is carried fully backstage and into the conflicts and negotiations among Olympic organizing committees, the Greek Olympic movement, national governments, and transnational actors like the IOC, commercial sponsors, and operations management firms. Readers will come to know the leading flame relay authorities and practitioners, gaining a deeper understanding of the Olympic managerial revolution with its characteristic ‘world’s best practice’ language. Analysis of the transnational flow of Olympic operations management offers important corrections to much existing globalization theory by demonstrating both how powerful and how culturally and politically parochial world’s best practices can turn out to be. The dialectic between the cultural performance genres of ritual and spectacle provides a further intellectual architecture for these studies posing the question of whether the Olympic Movement will be able to survive the successes of the Olympic Sports Industry. This book was previously published as a special issue of Sport in Society.