The Olympic ideal and the Olympic Games stand as symbols of global cooperation, international understanding and the bonding of individuals through the medium of sports. However, throughout the twentieth century, Olympic rhetoric was often confronted by a different reality. The Games have regularly been faced by crises that have threatened the spirit of Olympism and even the Games themselves. Given the many changes that have occurred in the Olympic Games during the past century it seems reasonable to ask if this global event has a future and, if so, what form it might take. With this larger issue in mind, the authors of Post-Olympism? ask probing questions about the following:the infamous 1936 Olympicsthe effect of new technologies on the Gamesthe future impact of the 2008 Beijing Games on China and of China on the Olympicsthe local and regional impact of the Sydney green Olympicsthe Games and globalizationDisneyficationracismdrug abuseThe book provides a useful overview of the ongoing significance of the Olympics and will be essential reading for anyone with a serious interest in the Games.The Future of Multi-Sport Mega Events--Richard Cashman * Troping Aloning: A Historian's View of Olympic Scholarship--Douglas Booth * Citius, Altius, Fortius: A Critique and a Reinterpetation--Sigmund Loland * What's the Difference between Propaganda for Tourism or for a Political Regime? The 1936 Olympics in World Perspective--Arnd Kr?ger * Accelerating Olympism: The Poetics and Problematics of Nano, Virtual, and Cyborg Sport Technologies--Synthia Sydnor * The Aesthetic Dimensions of Sport--Soren Damkjaer * Drugs and the Olympics in the Context of Aesthetics--Verner Moller * Olympic Legacies: Sport, Space and the Practices of Everyday Life--Douglas Brown * Olympism, Post-Humanism and the Spectacle of Race--Ben Carrington * China and Olympism--Susan Brownell * The Global, the Popular and the Inter-Popular: Olympic Sport between Market, State and Civil Society--Henningl"