Race, Sport, and the American Dream"Race, Sport and the American Dream is the culmination of a five-year research project investigating the scope and consequences of the deepening relationship between African American males and the institution of sport. It examines how sport has changed the nature of African American civil society and has come to be a major influence on economic opportunities, schooling, and the shaping of African American family life. The book probes the broader socio-cultural milieu surrounding the dialectic of African American athletes and mainstream American society. Smith examines the colonizing and exploitative nature of intercollegiate sports and the special arrangements that universities have with the world of sport through the lens of Immanuel Wallerstein's "World-Systems Paradigm." He also analyzes the world of professional sports, from NASCARto the NBA. All of the topics in this book, from youth violence, to sport as big business, to incivility and criminal behavior by athletes, to the lack of leadership and management opportunities in their sports for African American athletes who retire from play, to the question of the biological superiority of African American athletes verses white athletes, are addressed within the context of the history of racial oppression that has dominated race relations in the United States since its inception as a nation-state in the 1620s."--BOOK JACKET. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 81
Page 26
... argue against those critics who have called for an end to using race as an important variable in working toward a ... arguments that have been used to explain racial differences in sport . Scholars have raised these arguments or ...
... argue against those critics who have called for an end to using race as an important variable in working toward a ... arguments that have been used to explain racial differences in sport . Scholars have raised these arguments or ...
Page 63
... argue that advantages are inherent in people of different racial groups is flawed for three key reasons . • • · First : this argument assumes that race is biological rather than a social construct ( see Hattery and Smith 2007 for a ...
... argue that advantages are inherent in people of different racial groups is flawed for three key reasons . • • · First : this argument assumes that race is biological rather than a social construct ( see Hattery and Smith 2007 for a ...
Page 128
... argue that this segregation significantly detracts from the edu- cational experience of most student athletes as well as the non - athlete students . The segregation that is created by academic support centers also contributes to an ...
... argue that this segregation significantly detracts from the edu- cational experience of most student athletes as well as the non - athlete students . The segregation that is created by academic support centers also contributes to an ...
Contents
A New Sociology of Sports | 3 |
Explanations | 25 |
The Genetic Argument | 45 |
Copyright | |
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academic African Amer African American athletes African American coaches African American male African American players Ameri American Dream argue Art Shell athletic department Athletic Industrial Complex basketball players campus championship chapter college sports culture Dennis Green Edwards especially ethnic example fans football coach football total operating graduation rates head coach high school ican individual intercollegiate athletics intercollegiate sport Jackie Robinson Journal Kareem Abdul-Jabbar Latrell Sprewell major league baseball male athletes marginality men's basketball Michael Jordan million National NCAA Oakland Raiders Olympic opportunity play Press professional athletes professional sports programs race racial racism ranked by football recruiting relationship salaries Schools ranked segregation social society sociologist Sociology of Sport Sports Illustrated stadiums television Terrell Owens Texas Tiger Woods tion Tony Dungy USA Today Wake Forest White Williams women world-system theory York young African American