ABSTRACT

For more than a century, sporting spectacles, media coverage, and popular audiences have staged athletics in black and white. Commercial, media, and academic accounts have routinely erased, excluded, ignored, and otherwise made absent the Asian American presence in sport. This book seeks to redress this pattern of neglect, presenting a comprehensive perspective on the history and significance of Asian American athletes, coaches, and teams in North America. The contributors interrogate the sociocultural contexts in which Asian Americans lived and played, detailing the articulations of power and possibility, difference and identity, representation and remembrance that have shaped the means and meanings of Asian Americans playing sport in North America. This volume will be of interest to students and scholars of the Asian American experience, ethnic relations, and the history of sport.

chapter 1|10 pages

Introduction

Sport, Racism, and the Media

part |98 pages

Society

chapter 2|19 pages

Beyond Black and White

Chinese American Women's Experience in Sports

chapter 3|15 pages

A Haunt in the Hunt

The Oriental Specter in the Wisconsin Deer Stand Incident

chapter 4|20 pages

"Liting It Up"

Indo-Pak Basketball and Finding the American-ness in South Asian American Institutions

chapter 5|19 pages

Cheering for Our Team

Coverage of Women's Basketball in a Japanese American Community Newspaper

chapter 6|23 pages

Sex, Sports, and Spectatorship

The Transnational Erotics of Korean Athletes

part |80 pages

Celebrity

chapter 8|18 pages

The Spring of 1989

Michael Chang, Roland Garros, and Tiananmen Square

chapter 9|14 pages

Chow Can Coach

Against Model Minorities Within College Sports

chapter 10|20 pages

Yo! Yao!

The "Ming Dynasty" and the Construction of an Asian American Identity

chapter 11|17 pages

Living with Linsanity

A Retro-Diary of the Jeremy Lin Phenomenon 1