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Frontline Bodies

Sports and Black Struggles for Justice Since the Late Nineteenth Century

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Frontline Bodies

By: Nicolas Martin-Breteau, Lucy Garnier - translator, Damion L. Thomas - foreword
Narrated by: Amir Abdullah
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In Frontline Bodies, Nicolas Martin-Breteau argues that sports are not—and have never been—purely about entertainment for Black Americans. Instead, beginning in the 1890s during Reconstruction, Black Americans proactively used athletics as a tactic to fight racial oppression.

Martin-Breteau considers the work of Edwin B. Henderson, a prominent Black physical educator, civil rights activist, and historian of Black sports. Training Black children as athletes, Henderson felt, would work both to fortify racial pride and to dismantle racial prejudices—two necessary requirements for a successful political liberation struggle. In this way, physical education became political education.

By the end of the twentieth century, Martin-Breteau argues, racial uplift through sports had lost its emancipating power. The emphasis on the accumulation of wealth for professional athletes, as well as sports' ability to reinforce anti-Black stereotypes, had become a political problem for true collective liberation. For a marginalized group of people that has been physically excluded from the democratic process, however, sports remain a political resource. By studying the relationship between athletics and politics, Frontline Bodies renews the history of minority bodies and their power of action.

©2024 Johns Hopkins University Press (P)2024 HighBridge, a division of Recorded Books
Americas Black & African American Social Sciences Sports History United States Sports Social justice Socialism
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