“与种族隔离一起玩”:爱尔兰和南非橄榄球,1964-19891

IF 0.4 4区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY Sport History Review Pub Date : 2020-01-01 DOI:10.1123/SHR.2020-0027
Chris Bolsmann
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引用次数: 1

摘要

反对种族隔离的斗争在许多战线上进行。在国际上,一些国家的反种族隔离运动(AAM)开展了一系列活动,突出了比勒陀利亚政权的暴行和南非大多数人的困境。反对种族隔离斗争的一个重要场所是在体育领域。爱尔兰和爱尔兰AAM在这方面发挥了重要作用。澳大利亚、英国、爱尔兰、新西兰和美国等国的aam通过示威、抵制和禁止南非球队参加国际巡回赛、锦标赛和赛事等方式,取得了反对种族隔离的胜利。一些学者强调了国际黑人体育协会及其反对种族隔离运动的作用。迄今为止,关于反种族隔离斗争和南非体育运动的历史研究主要集中在英国和新西兰,其次是美国。爱尔兰与南非的体育联系可以追溯到一个多世纪以前。因此,关注爱尔兰AAM反对种族隔离运动的案例研究进一步增加了体育抵制和反对种族隔离斗争的文献。本文借鉴了雅各布·德拉米尼(Jacob Dlamini)的“道德代理人”(moral agents)概念,来理解运动员、球队和体育协会不顾国际社会的反对,继续推行种族隔离制度的决定。本文从爱尔兰和南非的档案资料中,为1964年至1989年南非橄榄球运动中反对种族隔离的斗争增添了新的细节。
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“Playing With Apartheid”: Irish and South African Rugby, 1964–19891
The struggle against apartheid was fought on many fronts. Internationally, the Anti-Apartheid Movement (AAM) across a number of countries engaged in a range of activities that highlighted the atrocities of the Pretoria regime and the plight of the majority in South Africa. An important site of struggle against apartheid was in the sports sphere. Ireland and the Irish AAM played a significant role in this regard. The AAMs in Australia, Britain, Ireland, New Zealand, and the United States, among others, recorded victories against apartheid through demonstrations, boycotts, and the ban on participation of South African teams in international tours, tournaments, and events. A number of scholars have highlighted the role of the international AAM and its campaigns against apartheid sport. To date, historical studies of the anti-apartheid struggle and South African sport have primarily focused on Britain and New Zealand and, to a lesser extent, the United States. Irish sporting contacts with South Africa extend back over a century. Thus, focusing on the case study of Irish AAM activism against segregated sport further adds to the literature on the sports boycott and the struggle against apartheid. This article draws on Jacob Dlamini’s notion of “moral agents” in understanding players’, teams’, and sports associations’ decisions to continue to play with apartheid, despite international opposition. Drawing from archives in Ireland and South Africa, this article adds new details to the struggle against apartheid rugby in South African sport between 1964 and 1989.
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