Abstract
Abstract:This article explores how indigenous games such as wrestling were marginalized during the colonial era and the contemporary impact of this legacy. Through the sport of wrestling’s neotraditional resurgence, I argue that the sport’s contemporary iteration which emerged behind the imposing walls of Kenya’s penitentiaries provides an important window into historic discourse and state control of sport rooted in the colonial past. Paying close attention to the methodological challenges and opportunities researchers of indigenous sport face, the article also examines the sources available for scholars interested in investigating the social history of indigenous sport in Africa.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference62 articles.
1. Fighting Boys, Strong Men and Gorillas: Notes on the Imagination of Masculinities in Kinshasa
2. Kariuki Anthony , “Strategy to Enhance Financial Partnership Through Accountability of Sports Organization in Kenya,” unpublished manuscript, Université de Poitiers (2008).
3. “The Labors of ‘Muigwithania:’ Jomo Kenyatta as Author, 1928–45,”;Berman;Research in African Literatures,1998