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Race and Resistance in Boston
A Contested Sports History
by Robert Cvornyek and Douglas Stark
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Pub Date Feb 01 2025 | Archive Date Jan 31 2025
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Description
This collection takes a close look at Black Bostonians’ involvement in sports as varied as soccer, cricket, boxing, baseball, golf, tennis, basketball, and hockey—and illuminates the effect of Boston’s desegregation and busing crisis on scholastic athletics in the 1970s and 1980s. With personal reminiscences from former New England Patriot Devin McCourty and journalist Bijan Bayne, as well as research from scholars of sport, Race and Resistance in Boston captures the intersection of Black history and sporting culture in America’s City on a Hill.
Advance Praise
“A must-read for anyone who wants to go deep into the issue of race and sport and how they intersect with society. Focusing on Boston is a powerful and meaningful approach, as it is a perfect microcosm of these issues. . . . Cvornyek and Stark go deep into the subject of how racism affects sport but also show how sport can be used to bring people together across racial and economic divides.”—Richard E. Lapchick, president of the Institute for Sport and Social Justice
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781496232687 |
PRICE | $39.95 (USD) |
PAGES | 404 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
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Trying to write a review of this book can be a challenge – just like describing the history of racial issues in Boston, especially in the world of sports. This collection of essays is a very noble attempt to describe how various sports played a role in this discussion and how the full history can be best described as “complicated.”
Just the well-known facts can send a mixed signal to the average person – Boston teams were the first ones to draft a Black player in the NBA (Chuck Cooper, Celtics), to have a Black player appear in an NHL game (Willie O’Ree, Bruins) and the first Black coach to win an NBA title (Bill Russell, Celtics.) Yet, the Red Sox were the last baseball team to integrate, they held a bogus “tryout” for three players in 1945, including Jackie Robinson, and the city as a whole held Black athletes to different standards. Even legends like Russell felt that the city was less than welcoming toward them.
This collection of essays tries to bring to light some of the lesser-known matters of the issues, challenges and successes experienced by these athletes. One excellent example is the rich history of semi-pro baseball in the Boston area by many Black teams. They not only played excellent games, some of which are described in great detail, they also faced many white or integrated teams and received praise for their play. This was the best chapter for one of the main goals of the book – to shine the light on lesser-known athletes and their accomplishments. That goes for their work toward civil rights and equality for all people as well as their athletic achievements.
The variety of sports covered in the book was also impressive – baseball, hockey, basketball, cricket, tennis and golf are just a few of the sports in which Boston-based Black athletes made contributions to both their sport and the fight for equality. That was the biggest takeaway I had with this book – the sheer number of unknown athletes whose contributions have been lost in time. It should also be noted that the subjects of equality for women, non-binary athletes and the LBGTQ+ community are also addressed in the book as well as racial issues.
The book is a more scholarly one in nature, has many notes and references and is one that a reader must read carefully to fully grasp the message being sent by the writer. However, that time will be well spent after learning the amazing work done by these athletes.
I wish to thank University of Nebraska Press for providing a copy of the book. The opinions expressed in this review are strictly my own.