Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Rowman & Littlefield International
Pages: 480
Trim: 6 x 9
978-1-78661-522-0 • Hardback • February 2021 • $33.00 • (£25.00)
978-1-78661-523-7 • Paperback • September 2021 • $19.95 • (£14.95)
978-1-78661-524-4 • eBook • September 2021 • $19.00 • (£14.95) (coming soon)
Peter Hain spent his childhood in South Africa. After his anti-apartheid parents were jailed, banned and forced into exile in Britain, he led campaigns to stop all-white Springbok and other all-white sports tours, later becoming a Labour MP and Cabinet Minister, then a member of the House of Lords and author of over twenty books.
Andre Odendaal is Honorary Professor in History and Heritage Studies at the University of the Western Cape. A former first-class cricketer and anti-apartheid activist, he is author or co-author of a dozen books on the social history of sport and the history of the liberation struggle in South Africa.
1. ‘Hain Stopped Play’
2. Empire and the British roots of sports apartheid
3. A matter of life and death: Sport and rebellion
4. SANROC in exile: Intensifying the sports boycott
5. SACOS and the revival of the sports struggle inside South Africa
6. Preparing to govern: Struggle, disjuncture and new strategies for sport in South Africa
7. Sport and nation-building: The final push for national liberation and democracy, 1989–96
8. Making sense of sport and globalisation today
Epilogue
Pitch Battles is a brilliant study of how sports played a crucial role in ending apartheid written by two men who played leading roles in one of the epic battles of the 20th century. Hain, who launched the campaign to boycott apartheid sport, and Odendaal weave their own riveting stories with fascinating historical material about the wider issues of race and its central role in politics and society. This much needed history will be uncomfortable reading for those who have reinvented themselves as fighters against apartheid when they did everything to prop up the evil tyranny. But while celebrating apartheid’s fall the authors remind us that the battle to have a level playing field is far from won.— Mihir Bose
The sports struggle was crucial in defeating apartheid— Mavuso Msimang
This is a story that needs to be told. Sportsmen and women like me were not allowed to represent their country in the past. Pitch Battles shows how this came about. And also how it took decades of struggle to open up opportunities for my generation, enabling me to take that 5/15 against the Aussies at Newlands and play at Lords and other great grounds in the world. — Vernon Philander
Stopping the 1970 cricket tour confronted white South Africa with the necessity to end racism in cricket.— Mike Brearley
I refused to play against the Springboks because that would have meant playing with apartheid and betraying many friends.
— John Taylor