BLACK, Jack (2025). Nationalism, Racism and Sport. In: Routledge Resources Online – Race and Racism. Routledge. [Book Section]
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Abstract
Nationalism, Racism and Sport examines the enduring relationship between sport, national identity, and racial inequality, revealing sport as a paradoxical cultural form that both reproduces and contests racism. Tracing its origins to imperial history, the resource highlights how modern sport emerged through practices of racial distinction within the British Empire, where team games were used to cultivate the moral and physical superiority of the colonizer. This legacy persists in contemporary sporting cultures, where racial hierarchies are perpetuated through stereotypes, institutional norms, and liberal ideologies, which obscure systemic inequality. While sport provides a platform for anti-racist expression (exemplified by figures, such as, Muhammad Ali, Tommie Smith, and Colin Kaepernick), such protests are often individualized, depoliticized, and punished, leaving the racialized structures of sport largely intact. Similarly, liberal multiculturalism and tokenistic celebration of minority athletes function less as challenges to racism than as mechanisms for reaffirming national self-image. The resource argues that sport remains a central site for understanding the contradictions of nationalism. It exposes racism’s persistence even as it imagines a universal, inclusive humanity. To confront racism in and through sport requires engaging the historical and structural inequalities that continue to shape both the sporting field and the nation itself.
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