ABSTRACT

The year 2003 marks the one-hundredth anniversary of W.E.B. Du Bois' "Souls of Black Folk," in which he declared that "the color line" would be the problem of the twentieth century. Half a century later, Jackie Robinson would display his remarkable athletic skills in "baseball's great experiment." Now, "Sport and the Color Line" takes a look at the last century through the lens of sports and race, drawing together articles by many of the leading figures in Sport Studies to address the African American experience and the history of race relations.
The history of African Americans in sport is not simple, and it certainly did not begin in 1947 when Jackie Robinson first donned a Brooklyn Dodgers uniform. The essays presented here examine the complexity of black American sports culture, from the organization of semi-pro baseball and athletic programs at historically black colleges and universities, to the careers of individual stars such as Jack Johnson and Joe Louis, to the challenges faced by black women in sports. What are today's black athletes doing in the aftermath of desegregation, or with the legacy of Muhammad Ali's political stance? The essays gathered here engage such issues, as well as the paradoxes of corporate sport and the persistence of scientific racism in the athletic realm.

part I|144 pages

Sport and Community in the Era of Jim Crow

chapter 2|23 pages

Black Entrepreneurship in the National Pastime

The Rise of Semiprofessional Baseball in Black Chicago, 1890–1915

chapter 3|21 pages

Year of the Comet

Jack Johnson versus Jim Jeffries, July 4, 1910

chapter 4|25 pages

“A General Understanding”

Organized Baseball and Black Professional Baseball, 1900–1930

chapter 5|21 pages

“We Were Ladies, We Just Played Like Boys”

African-American Womanhood and Competitive Basketball at Bennett College, 1928–1942

chapter 6|25 pages

A Special Type of Discipline

Manhood and Community in African-American Institutions, 1923–1957

part II|171 pages

The Ordeal of Desegregation

chapter 7|24 pages

Joe Louis

American Folk Hero

chapter 8|24 pages

“End Jim Crow in Sports”

The Leonard Bates Controversy and Protest at New York University, 1940–1941

chapter 9|27 pages

Jackie Robinson

“A Lone Negro” in Major League Baseball

chapter 10|24 pages

More Than a Game

The Political Meaning of High School Basketball in Indianapolis

chapter 11|27 pages

“Cinderellas” of Sport

Black Women in Track and Field

chapter 12|22 pages

Jim Crow in the Gymnasium

The Integration of College Basketball in the American South

chapter 13|20 pages

Civil Rights on the Gridiron

The Kennedy Administration and the Desegregation of the Washington Redskins

part III|96 pages

Images of the Black Athlete and the Racial Politics of Sport

chapter 15|18 pages

The Greatest

Muhammad Ali's Confounding Character

chapter 17|22 pages

The Anatomy of Scientific Racism

Racialist Responses to Black Athletic Achievement