In 1935-1936, a non-sanctioned group of cricketers embarked on the inaugural tour of India with the ambitious, unorthodox, professional Frank Tarrant employed as team manager. Maharaja Bhupinder Singh lavishly financed the tour motivated by his love of cricket, his political and economic aspirations, its recognition as a symbol of allegiance to the British and by the prospect of leaving a legacy as the guardian of the game. Primary source material reveals that xenophobic prejudice and discrimination were endemic during the 1930s and the relationship between Tarrant and the Maharaja challenged the imperial paradigm. This article interrogates the mutually advantageous relationship and the tour through Orientalist theory discourse. The role of...
As part of the LSE Literature Festival, the South Asia Centre held a panel on the revolutionary powe...
The South Asian communities who came to post-war Britain had numerous ways of maintaining links with...
Cricket and entertainment in India have been inextricably connected deeper and wider than is acknowl...
Financier Maharaja Bhupinder Singh and tour manager Frank Tarrant are the two key protagonists of th...
The Australian team that toured India in 1935/36 comprised atypical cricket personnel. Their cultura...
To a great extent, popular representations of Indo-Australian relations have been viewed through the...
This article critiques the Indian material culture located in present-day Pakistan pertaining to the...
An analysis of the Australian cricket team’s experiences in India in 1935/36 reveals that many eleme...
This article critiques the first Australian cricket tour of India in 1935/36 through a synthesis of ...
This article explores the contradictory responses to cricket in India from the perspective of transc...
This article critiques photographs and material culture pertaining to the consumption of food and al...
India's extremely diverse society has managed to hold together for over 60 years. There are a number...
In October 1935, a touring party embarked on the inaugural tour of India by an Australian cricket te...
This article critiques the symbolism of the journey as a team of Australian cricketers voyaged to In...
This article critiques the symbolism of the journey as a team of Australian cricketers voyaged to In...
As part of the LSE Literature Festival, the South Asia Centre held a panel on the revolutionary powe...
The South Asian communities who came to post-war Britain had numerous ways of maintaining links with...
Cricket and entertainment in India have been inextricably connected deeper and wider than is acknowl...
Financier Maharaja Bhupinder Singh and tour manager Frank Tarrant are the two key protagonists of th...
The Australian team that toured India in 1935/36 comprised atypical cricket personnel. Their cultura...
To a great extent, popular representations of Indo-Australian relations have been viewed through the...
This article critiques the Indian material culture located in present-day Pakistan pertaining to the...
An analysis of the Australian cricket team’s experiences in India in 1935/36 reveals that many eleme...
This article critiques the first Australian cricket tour of India in 1935/36 through a synthesis of ...
This article explores the contradictory responses to cricket in India from the perspective of transc...
This article critiques photographs and material culture pertaining to the consumption of food and al...
India's extremely diverse society has managed to hold together for over 60 years. There are a number...
In October 1935, a touring party embarked on the inaugural tour of India by an Australian cricket te...
This article critiques the symbolism of the journey as a team of Australian cricketers voyaged to In...
This article critiques the symbolism of the journey as a team of Australian cricketers voyaged to In...
As part of the LSE Literature Festival, the South Asia Centre held a panel on the revolutionary powe...
The South Asian communities who came to post-war Britain had numerous ways of maintaining links with...
Cricket and entertainment in India have been inextricably connected deeper and wider than is acknowl...