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Multicultural cricket? National identity and the Australian Cricket Board’s annual report
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Multicultural cricket? National identity and the Australian Cricket Board’s annual report

David Utting
Journal of Australian Studies, Vol.39(3), pp.362-380
2015
url
https://doi.org/10.1080/14443058.2015.1051085View
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Abstract

Australian identity migrants test cricket multiculturalism nation
From the early 1980s much political and cultural discourse in Australia concerned immigration, multiculturalism and the interpretation of Australian history. In the 1970s and 1980s historians had asserted a place for test cricket in the development of the Australian nation, an assertion which was adopted by the Australian Cricket Board (ACB) as a major promotional strategy between 1998 and 2009. This paper examines the representation of cricket by the ACB in its annual reports since 1983-1984, and the "Australia" that it chose to represent. It will show that the Board in the pre-Howard government years quietly represented itself as a powerful part of the Australian mainstream, "coming out" between 1998 and 2009 to clearly promote a view of Australian culture which aligned with John Howard's view of Australian identity, and after 2009 dropped any allusion to its place in Australian cultural development. It discusses how the Board's representation of its role in Australian culture dealt with the apparently competing objectives of promoting cricket as a significant part of an AngloAustralian culture, while at the same time embracing a growing migrant population.

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Web Of Science research areas
Area Studies
Cultural Studies
History
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