This chapter examines the role of the sport of cricket in the English Diaspora in South Africa. It investigates the social construction of cricket during the Victorian era and its portrayal as the archetypal ‘Englishman's game’ and explores the key agents and institutions responsible for instilling the sense of ‘Englishness’ upon the game both within South Africa and back in England during the Boer War era. This chapter also considers the view that cricket became the cornerstone of Empire, as it provided a training ground for service to empire and countered the insecurity of colonial society
Cricket is perhaps the quintessential English game, evoking images of green fields and dreaming spi...
The dissertation will investigate how cricket integrated a frontier society whose initial class stru...
The South Asian communities who came to post-war Britain had numerous ways of maintaining links with...
'It has become an accepted fact,' declared one South African observer in 1915, 'that where Englishme...
'It has become an accepted fact,' declared one South African observer in 1915, 'that where Englishme...
During the later years of Queen Victoria's reign, cricket was as popular as ever in the home country...
During the later years of Queen Victoria's reign, cricket was as popular as ever in the home country...
This article will explore the early development of cricket throughout the different regions and pop...
For Patrick Morrah, the 'golden age' of English cricket came at the dawn of the twentieth century, s...
For Patrick Morrah, the ‘golden age’ of English cricket came at the dawn of the twentieth century, s...
The game cricket has become almost synonymous with all that is English. Of the three major British s...
Sport: race, ethnicity and identity: building global understandingIn line with policies of imperiali...
This thesis examines aspects of the relationship between cricket and New Zealand society from 1840 t...
Cricket, Class and Colonialism examines the relationship between two elite cricket clubs (the Maryl...
In line with policies of imperialism, Britons of the late Victorian era believed themselves to be su...
Cricket is perhaps the quintessential English game, evoking images of green fields and dreaming spi...
The dissertation will investigate how cricket integrated a frontier society whose initial class stru...
The South Asian communities who came to post-war Britain had numerous ways of maintaining links with...
'It has become an accepted fact,' declared one South African observer in 1915, 'that where Englishme...
'It has become an accepted fact,' declared one South African observer in 1915, 'that where Englishme...
During the later years of Queen Victoria's reign, cricket was as popular as ever in the home country...
During the later years of Queen Victoria's reign, cricket was as popular as ever in the home country...
This article will explore the early development of cricket throughout the different regions and pop...
For Patrick Morrah, the 'golden age' of English cricket came at the dawn of the twentieth century, s...
For Patrick Morrah, the ‘golden age’ of English cricket came at the dawn of the twentieth century, s...
The game cricket has become almost synonymous with all that is English. Of the three major British s...
Sport: race, ethnicity and identity: building global understandingIn line with policies of imperiali...
This thesis examines aspects of the relationship between cricket and New Zealand society from 1840 t...
Cricket, Class and Colonialism examines the relationship between two elite cricket clubs (the Maryl...
In line with policies of imperialism, Britons of the late Victorian era believed themselves to be su...
Cricket is perhaps the quintessential English game, evoking images of green fields and dreaming spi...
The dissertation will investigate how cricket integrated a frontier society whose initial class stru...
The South Asian communities who came to post-war Britain had numerous ways of maintaining links with...