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Description
A significant examination of how athletes have fought for inclusion and equality on and off the playing field, despite calls for them to “stick to sports.”
The claim that sports are—or ought to be—apolitical has itself never been an apolitical position. Rather, it is a veiled attempt to control which politics are acceptable in the athletic realm, a designation intricately linked to issues of race, gender, ethnicity, and more.
In Don't Stick to Sports: The American Athlete’s Fight against Injustice, Derek Charles Catsam carefully explores this disparity. He looks at how, throughout recent sports history in the United States, minority athletes have had to fight every step of the way for their right to compete, and how they continue to fight for equity today. From African Americans and women to LGBTQ+ and religious minorities, Catsam shows how these athletes have taken a stand to address the underlying injustices in sports and society despite being told it’s not their place to do so.
While it’s impossible for a single book to tell the entire history of exclusion in the sporting world, Don’t Stick to Sports looks at key moments from the World War I era to the present to shatter the myth of sports as a meritocracy, of sports-as-equalizer, highlighting the reality as something far more complicated—of sports as a malleable world where exclusion and inclusion are rarely straight-forward.
Table of Contents
Introduction The Binded and the Protected
Chapter 1 “The Highest Point of the Game’s Enthusiasm”: The National Anthem, Patriotism, and the 1918 World Series
Chapter 2 Of “Dead Sparrows” and “Muscle Molls”: Gender Expectations and Women’s Sport
Chapter 3 Jackie Robinson, The Army, and Sam Huston College: The Dilemma of the Black Athlete in 1940s
Chapter 4 A Tale of Two Cities: The Integration of Professional Sports in Boston and Cleveland
Chapter 5 The 1960s and the Limits of “Integration” in American College Sports
Chapter 6 Oh Say Can You See?: Rebellion, Anger, and Contested Americanisms
Chapter 7 Raised Fists, Black Shorts, and a Fallen Queen: Race, Politics, and Sex-pectations in Track and Field
Chapter 8Gaps Between Ideals and Reality: Exclusion and Modern Sport
Conclusion Taking a Knee: Sport and Politics in 21st Century America
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Product details
Published | Oct 11 2023 |
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Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 286 |
ISBN | 9781538144725 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Protests, taking a knee during the playing of the national anthem, culture wars—increasingly, sports and politics are tangled together. While professional athletes ply their trade in front of tens of thousands of avid fans and millions of TV viewers, their personal lives and behavior are also scrutinized. Historian Catsam concludes, "Athletes who deviated from the expectation to be seen and rarely heard would find that they were very much bound and very much not protected." .... Professional athletes have the right to use their stage and celebrity to promote social justice, and calling attention to injustice is certainly not unpatriotic. A winning and widely appealing blend of biography, sports history, and the struggle for social justice.
Booklist
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This book is a worthy addition to the literature about athlete activism in the US because of its readability and because it highlights some less-known history in the context of more famous incidents. The book begins with the mythologized origin-story of the “Star-Spangled Banner” being played at the 1918 World Series, noting that the song had been played at several prior games as early as 1862, long before it was designated the national anthem….The recurring theme is that athletes have long used their voices to call out injustice and have long been punished or ignored by society—until at some future point they are recast as heroes…. the histories revealed are compelling and the citations comprehensive. Recommended. All readers.
Choice Reviews
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History deniers, be warned. Professor and notable sports historian Derek Catsam hits a homerun with Don’t Stick to Sports, a collection of essays that highlight the unavoidable intersection between sports and politics in American culture. Catsam brilliantly draws the correlation between the 1918 global pandemic, domestic tensions, and the use of “The Star-Spangled Banner” to the 2020 global pandemic and subsequent debates on personal freedom and public health, and American athletes taking a knee during the National Anthem. Through the personal histories of some of the greatest names in NFL, NBA, and MLB, in boxing, track and field, tennis and more, Catsam challenges the idea that athletes should “stick to sports” and leave activism at the door even as sports has become a popular leverage for politicians to “rouse the ire of cultural warriors against imaginary foes.” From Muhammad Ali to Brittney Griner, from Bill Russell to Mary Decker, from Jackie Robinson to Billie Jean King, Catsam reminds us just how intertwined sports, politics, civil rights, and the most basic freedoms truly are. You need this book in your personal library.
Alexandra Allred, member of the first-ever U.S. women's bobsled team, USOC Athlete of the Year, White House Champion of Change for Public Health nominee, and author of When Women Stood: The Untold History of Females Who Changed Sports and the World
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As bottom-up history, Don’t Stick to Sports is a brave and bold book that will change the reader’s thinking about how they view American sports. From telling the history of the playing of the “Star-Spangled Banner” at sporting events, to detailing how today’s LGBTQ athletes navigate a toxic sporting space, Derek Catsam gives a powerful history lesson on why studying sports can tell us a lot about ourselves as a nation.
Louis Moore, historian, speaker, and author of We Will Win the Day: The Civil Rights Movement, the Black Athlete, and the Quest for Equality