Sport, Politics, and Identity in the Americas
MTA
Baseball, soccer, and national culture from ballfields to statecraft
2nd Edition
*Sport, Politics, and Identity in the Americas* explores the profound intersection of athletics, statecraft, and social evolution across the Western Hemisphere. Centering on the histories of baseball and soccer, the book illustrates how ballfields and stadiums have served as "public squares" where national virtues are performed and social fractures are exposed. From the industrial landscapes of the United States to the sugar plantations of the Caribbean and the urban barrios of Latin America, the narrative traces how these games migrated with capital and people, evolving into essential idioms of national belonging and instruments of soft power.
The text delves into the critical role of sport in navigating racial and gendered hierarchies. It examines the "color lines" of U.S. baseball and the myth of "racial democracy" in Brazilian soccer, highlighting how athletes from marginalized Indigenous and Afro-descendant communities used the pitch to demand visibility and dignity. The book also tracks the rise of women in these male-dominated spaces, illustrating how their struggle for professional recognition mirrored broader hemispheric shifts in power and visibility. Through case studies of mega-events like the 1968 Mexico City Olympics and the 1978 Argentina World Cup, the book demonstrates how authoritarian regimes and democratic states alike have conscripted sporting spectacles to manufacture legitimacy or distract from political repression.
Furthermore, the book analyzes the modern commodification of sport through the lenses of media, money, and transnational labor. It details the emergence of a global talent pipeline—exemplified by Dominican baseball academies—and the shift toward free agency and high-stakes transfer markets. This economic transition is balanced against the persistent emotional labor of diaspora fandoms, where migrant communities use digital platforms and local bars to maintain ties to their homelands. By examining the "legacy" of stadiums as both urban assets and sites of displacement, the book questions the true developmental impact of hosting global tournaments.
Looking toward the future, the work considers how climate change, biometric technology, and digital fragmentation are reshaping the athletic landscape. It concludes that while the business and delivery of sport are being revolutionized, the core stakes remain unchanged: the playing field continues to be a primary arena for negotiating citizenship, merit, and the right to the city. Ultimately, the book argues that sport in the Americas is not a diversion from reality but a concentrated version of it, where the possibilities for more just forms of belonging are continually tested and reimagined.
This book is ideal for students and scholars of Latin American and American studies, sports history, sociology, or political science who seek to understand how athletics intersects with national identity, power dynamics, and social movements. It will particularly benefit researchers examining the intersections of race, gender, and nationalism through sports, as well as professionals in sports management, international relations, or cultural policy needing historical context for contemporary issues. General readers with a deep interest in sports as a cultural phenomenon beyond scores and statistics will also find valuable insights into how the games we play reflect and shape the societies we live in.
May 5, 2026
68,301 words
4 hours 47 minutes
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