A variety of viewpoints, in historical context, are presented in this
anthology on the place of the Olympics as the leading international
sport event from antiquity to pondering their future. This collection
constitutes the most important academic and public policy issues
affecting the Olympic Movement today. It should be required reading for
anyone who wants to know about or bid for an Olympic Games. Part I
presents seven articles devoted to Olympic history: the Games' legacy
from antiquity, their modern evolution, and the most controversial Games
of the modern era, the Berlin Games of 1936. Part II reviews the
persistent problems and crises that confounded and defined the Olympic
Games over time. The nine essays in this section focus on a variety of
issues such as performance enhancement; the rise of commercialism;
enduring controversies in the form of leadership, corruption, and the
Cold War; and the politics of hosting Olympic Games. Finally, in Part
III, the future of the Modern Olympic Movement is addressed from the
perspective of the rapidly accelerating and mushrooming process of
globalization.