The Mediating Power of Sport

Global Challenges and Sport Culture in China

Enqing Tian|Nicholas Wise
Emerald
Emerald

This book can be opened with

Glassboxx eBooks and audiobooks can be opened on phones, tablets, iOS and Android devices

Hardback
9781837530793
07 October 2024
£85.00
eBook (PDF)
9781837530786
07 October 2024
£85.00
eBook (ePub)
9781837530809
07 October 2024
£85.00

Note on our eBooks and Audiobooks: you can read our eBooks (ePUB or PDF) and listen to audiobooks on the free Emerald Books app on iOS, Android, and desktop. Or read and listen on Emerald's online reader (ePUB eBooks and audiobooks only). To purchase a digital book you will need to create an account if you don’t already have one. After purchasing you will receive instructions on how to get started.

  • Description
  • Contents
  • About

Given China’s investment in sport, success in international competitions and recent hosting of high-profile events, there is no doubt the country is a rising power in the realm of global sports. Encouraging readers in other international settings to consider this topic from their own cultural contexts, this collection addresses the question of why China has so tightly embraced modern sport. How does this interact with China’s mediated ability to play and compete with the west?

The first English collation of works from both established and emerging sociological scholars on sport culture in China, this collection analyses how sport is seen as a channel of observing global, political and economic challenges. Bringing a foundational Chinese context to each chapter, contributors analyse topics including traditional sports, nationalism, football fandoms, commercialisation and esports. Offering critical insights into ‘glocalized’ sporting cultures and political hegemony, authors dig deep into common sociological theories to address issues around mediating power and China’s sport culture. Examining the relationship between sport and social transformation, contributors also reflect on how we might research the sociology of sport in China going forward.

Exploring how sporting cultures, practices and attitudes differ across cultural settings, The Mediating Power of Sport demonstrates how China has created new forms of influence through sport and considers what this might mean for how we think about soft power, international prowess and the deeper role sport can play on the world stage.

Introduction – The Mediating Power of Sport: Global Challenges and Sport Culture in China; Nicholas Wise and Enqing Tian

  • Chapter 1. Embodied Turn? Reviewing and Reflecting on the Study of Chinese Traditional Sports Culture; Zhen Zhang
  • Chapter 2. Chinese Sports Heroes and Nationalism at Mega-Sporting Events; Gen Li
  • Chapter 3. Debates on Football and Chinese National Identity; Kaixiao Jiang and Jinyu Liu
  • Chapter 4. Chinese Football Fandom: Growing with the Changing Chinese Society; Kaixiao Jiang and Liam O’Callaghan
  • Chapter 5. The Commercialisation of Chinese Professional Football: Transition and Evolution; Yang Ma
  • Chapter 6. Jack and the Visiting Giants: The Development of Chinese Baseball; Xiaoqian Richard Hu
  • Chapter 7. From an Expatriate-Only Sport to an Asian Games Sport: The Development of Cricket in China; Boyang He, Dominic Malcolm, and Chunyang Xu
  • Chapter 8. Esportisation: The Inclusion of Esports in the Hangzhou Asian Games; Jianping Hong and Jiandong Yi
  • Chapter 9. Running Culture in China: Conceptualizing Notions of Power and Self; Zhanbing Ren
  • Chapter 10. Challenges in Reforms of Chinese Elite Sports: Towards a New Development Mode; Dehao Ma and Liu Ji
  • Chapter 11. From “Imported” to “Local”: Framing Foundations on the Sociology of Sport in China; Qiang Gao and Le Zhou

Enqing Tian is Associate Professor at East China Normal University, China.

Nicholas Wise is Assistant Professor in the School of Community Resources and Development at Arizona State University, USA.