A Spectacular Leap: Black Women Athletes in Twentieth-Century America

A Spectacular Leap: Black Women Athletes in Twentieth-Century America

by Jennifer H. Lansbury
A Spectacular Leap: Black Women Athletes in Twentieth-Century America

A Spectacular Leap: Black Women Athletes in Twentieth-Century America

by Jennifer H. Lansbury

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Overview

When high jumper Alice Coachman won the high jump title at the 1941 national championships with "a spectacular leap," African American women had been participating in competitive sport for close to twenty-five years. Yet it would be another twenty years before they would experience something akin to the national fame and recognition that African American men had known since the 1930s, the days of Joe Louis and Jesse Owens. From the 1920s, when black women athletes were confined to competing within the black community, through the heady days of the late twentieth century when they ruled the world of women's track and field, African American women found sport opened the door to a better life. However, they also discovered that success meant challenging perceptions that many Americans—both black and white—held of them. Through the stories of six athletes—Coachman, Ora Washington, Althea Gibson, Wilma Rudloph, Wyomia Tyus, and Jackie Joyner-Kersee—Jennifer H. Lansbury deftly follows the emergence of black women athletes from the African American community; their confrontations with contemporary attitudes of race, class, and gender; and their encounters with the civil rights movement. Uncovering the various strategies the athletes use to beat back stereotypes, Lansbury explores the fullness of African American women's relationship with sport in the twentieth century.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781557286581
Publisher: University of Arkansas Press
Publication date: 04/01/2014
Series: Sport, Culture, and Society
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 300
Product dimensions: 9.00(w) x 6.40(h) x 1.20(d)

About the Author

Jennifer H. Lansbury formerly served as assistant professor of history and director of Sport and American Culture minor at George Mason University.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Introduction 3

1 Queen of the Courts: Ota Washington and the Emergence of Americas First Black Female Sport Celebrity 11

2 "The Tuskegee Flash": Alice Coachman and the Challenges of 1940s U.S. Women's Track and Field 43

3 "A Nationwide Community Project": Althea Gibson, Class, and the Racial Politics of 1950s Black Tennis 75

4 "Foxes, Not Oxes": Wilma Rudolph and the De-Marginalization of American Women's Track and Field 115

5 "The Swiftie from Tennessee State": Wyomia Tyus and the Racial Reality of Black Women Track Athletes in the 1960s and 1970s 151

6 "A Jackie of All Trades": Jackie Joyner-Kersee and the Challenges of Being the World's Greatest Female Athlete 191

Epilogue

Performance-Enhanced Athletes and "Ghetto Cinderellas": Black Women Athletes Enter the Twenty-First Century 231

Notes 247

Bibliography 289

Index 301

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