James Astill

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James Astill



Average rating: 3.87 · 252 ratings · 40 reviews · 3 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Great Tamasha: Cricket,...

3.88 avg rating — 240 ratings — published 2012 — 17 editions
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The Shorter Wisden 2011: Se...

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3.50 avg rating — 12 ratings — published 2011
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“Such class-based oddities gave English cricket a somewhat paradoxical reputation. It was at once popular and elite. It was exclusive yet, as a rare forum for gentry and commoners to interact, a source of social cohesion. Hence the historian G.M. Trevelyan’s famous claim that the French aristocrats would have spared themselves the guillotine if they had only played cricket with their serfs.”
James Astill, The Great Tamasha: Cricket, Corruption and the Turbulent Rise of Modern India

“Within a year or two of Partition – despite all the massacres that had attended it – Hindu–Muslim relations appeared, almost miraculously, to have returned to normal in India. This was highlighted by Pakistan’s maiden Test tour of India, in 1952. It was by far the most prominent interaction between the two countries since their bloody separation. It was also less than five years since their inaugural war, over the former princely state of Kashmir, which was divided in the process. Yet the visiting Pakistanis were feted by India’s government in Delhi (where they also visited the shrine in Nizamuddin) and by rapturous crowds.”
James Astill, The Great Tamasha: Cricket, Corruption and the Turbulent Rise of Modern India

“Yet Azhar also had it tough. When India played Pakistan, the pressure on him to perform was enormous. Indian Muslims needed his runs for inspiration; Hindu nationalists needed them to be convinced of his loyalty. When Azhar once scored a match-winning century, Thackeray declared him a ‘nationalist Muslim’, a phrase that was doubly insidious.”
James Astill, The Great Tamasha: Cricket, Corruption and the Turbulent Rise of Modern India



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