Roman Reismüller, Jim Parry
The Kladruby Games, the Paralympics, and the pre-history of disability sport
Číslo: 1/2017
Periodikum: Acta Universitatis Carolinae Kinanthropologica
DOI: 10.14712/23366052.2017.6
Klíčová slova: Kladruby Games; Paralympics; disability sport; Vojmír Srdečný, Kladrubské hry, Paralympijské hry; Zdravotní postižení; Vojmír Srdečný
Pro získání musíte mít účet v Citace PRO.
However, there was both an historical context and a co-history to these brief details – there are lessons from both time and place. We must not forget (or fail to acknowledge) some of the pre-history and parallel histories, which we should attempt to recover.
This article presents an account of the development of the Kladruby Games in Czechoslovakia from 1948, which in 2017 celebrate their 100th edition, in order to bring to light some of the hidden history of disability sport. We might be led to speculate on how the Kladruby Games might have developed from these very promising beginnings, had Srdečný received earlier support from the authorities, and the impetus to consider Olympic connections. Such speculations we consider to be fruitless, given the very different conceptions of disability sport at work here. Srdečný’s continuing commitment was to seeing the Kladruby Games as an impetus to the rehabilitative and recreational benefits of sport, rather than the contradictions experienced by the Paralympics in balancing elite performance values with its other aims.