The United States uses the Olympic Games to construct and contest its national image. For more than a century the Olympics have served the U. S. as a site for erecting memorials to American patriotism and developing mythologies of American exceptionalism.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
1 Prologue: Crafting Patriotism - America at the Olympic Games
2 'This Flag Dips for No Earthly King': The Mysterious Origins of an American Myth
3 'To Dip or Not to Dip': The American Flag at the Olympic Games Since 1936
4 'America's Athletic Missionaries': Political Performance, Olympic Spectacle and the Quest for an American National Culture, 1896-1912
5 Return to the Melting Pot: An Old American Olympic Story
6 Prolegomena to Jesse Owens: American Ideas About Race and Olympic Races from the 1890s to the 1920s
7 American Ideas About Race and Olympic Races in the Era of Jesse Owens: Shattering Myths or Reinforcing Scientific Racism?
8 Johnny Weissmuller and the Old Global Capitalism: The Origins of the Federal Blueprint for Selling American Culture to the World
9 Marketing Weissmuller to the World: Hollywood's Olympics and Federal Schemes for Americanization through Sport
10 Epilogue: Crafting Patriotism - Meditations on 'Californication' and Other Trends