"A Fascinating look at the exploits of outstanding black tennis players and how the sport was closely intertwined with racial identity, advertising, and notions of style in such [regions] as Australia, Africa, and South America. Essential reading for anyone interested in knowing how blacks have negotiated the racial divide in one of the most popular, yet traditionally white sports."—David K. Wiggins, George Mason University
Description
While much has been written about black triumphs in boxing, baseball, and other sports, little has been said of similar accomplishments in tennis. In this final volume of his ambitious and thorough examination of black achievement in international tennis, Djata comprehensively fills that gap. Exploring the discrimination that kept blacks out of pro tennis for decades, he examines the role that this traditionally white sport played in the black community and provides keen insights into the politics of professional sports and the challenges faced by today’s black players.
Drawing on original and published interviews, life writings, and newspaper articles, Djata offers an in-depth look at black participation in tennis in Europe, Africa, Australia, and the Caribbean. The author investigates how black African players broke through the color barrier of the South African apartheid, using sport to gain international sympathy in the face of oppressive discrimination. Djata’s wide-ranging history includes Aboriginal Australians and a chronicle of Yannick Noah’s racial identity in the eyes of the French and the world.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. Yannick Noah: "Saga Africa"
2. Africa above the Kalahari
3. South Africa
4. Evonne Goolagong: Emerging from Down Under
5. The Caribbean and South America
6. Ronald Agenor: Making a Career on His Own
7. Image and Style: Is Image Everything?
8. Advertising and the Black Tennis Professional: Reaching Madison Avenue
9. Racial Identity: "Black and What!"
10. Obstacles to Blacks in Tennis
Conclusion: Visions of Hope
About the Author
Sundiata Djata studies and teaches African history, African American history, Caribbean history, Latin American history, and U.S. sport history and has received degrees from the University of Illinois, Urbana Campaign; Oklahoma City University; Morgan State University; and the University of Massachusetts. Djata is the author of The Bamana by the Niger: Kingdom, Jihad, and Colonization, 1712-1920 and has written articles on black music history, the Brazilian Naval Revolt of 1910, blacks and advertising, and the construction of black sexuality.
Related Interest
May 2008