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Informationen zum Autor C. Richard King, associate professor of comparative ethnic studies at Washington State University, has written extensively on the changing position of Native Americans in post-Civil Rights America, the colonial legacies and postcolonial predicaments of American culture, and the racial politics of sport. He is also the author/editor of four books, including Team Spirits: The Native American Mascot Controversy (a CHOICE 2001 Outstanding Academic Title) Postcolonial America, and The Encyclopedia of Native Americans and Sport. Klappentext Taking examples from United States and Canada! this text offers compassionate and critical accounts of the Native American sporting experience. It challenges popular images of indigenous athletes and athletics. It explores Native American participation in and appropriation of EuroAmerican sports. Zusammenfassung This text offers a considerate and critical account of the Native American sporting experience. It challenges popular images of indigenous athletes and athletics exploring social categories, particularly gender and race and their implications. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Becoming Indian! Erasing History: George Catlin's Choctaw Ball-Play Paintings 2. The Legend of the Tarahumara: Tourism! Overcivilization! and the White Man's Indian 3. The Mythical Jim Thorpe: Represntations! Significations! and Implications 4. The Return of the Vanishing Indian: Imaging Indigenous Sport at Century's End 5. Native Sports at the Washakie Colony of Nothern Utah! 1906-1929 6. High School Sport on the Navajo Nation 7. First Nation Masculinity and its Influence on Canada's Sport Heritage 8. Interactions Between Mississippi Choctaw and European Americans through the Sport of Toli 9. 'Native to Native...We'll Recapture Our Spirits': The World Indigenous & Nations Games and North American Indigenous Games as Cultural Resistance 10. The Return of the Native: Sport and Indigenity in Postmodern Times ...