In this Book

Only a Black Athlete Can Save Us Now

Book
2022
summary

A call to arms exploring the protest movements of 2020 as they reverberated through the athletic world

Starting with the refusal of George Hill of the Milwaukee Bucks to participate in an August 2020 playoff game following the shooting of Jacob Blake by police in Kenosha, Wisconsin, Grant Farred shows how the Covid-restricted NBA “bubble” released an energy that spurred athletes into radical action. They disrupted athletic normalcy, and in their grief and rage against American racism they demonstrated the true progressivism lacking in even the most reformist-minded politicians and pundits. Farred goes on to trace the radicalism of black athletes in a number of sports, including the WNBA, women’s tennis, the NFL, and NASCAR, locating contemporary athletes in a lineage that runs through Muhammad Ali as well as Tommy Smith and John Carlos at the 1968 Olympics. 

Only a Black Athlete Can Save Us Now uses sport as a point of departure to argue that the dystopic crisis of our current moment offers a singular opportunity to reimagine how we live in the world.

Forerunners: Ideas First is a thought-in-process series of breakthrough digital publications. Written between fresh ideas and finished books, Forerunners draws on scholarly work initiated in notable blogs, social media, conference plenaries, journal articles, and the synergy of academic exchange. This is gray literature publishing: where intense thinking, change, and speculation take place in scholarship.

Table of Contents

Cover

Half Title Page, Series List, Title Page, Copyright, Dedication

pp. i-viii

Contents

pp. 10-11

Prologue

pp. ix-xxvi

1. The NBA and the WNBA Are the Most Progressive Forces in American Politics

pp. 1-6

2. From "Fear the Deer" to "Follow the Deer"

pp. 7-18

3. Out of One, Many

pp. 19-24

4. Reforming the Unreformable

pp. 25-34

5. Nur ein Gott kann uns jetzt Retten

pp. 35-36

6. Strange Things Happen in the Bubble

pp. 37-40

7. "Hey, Chicago, What Do You Say?"

pp. 41-42

8. The WNBA Takes Its Stance

pp. 43-50

9. Colin Kaepernick

pp. 51-56

10. Silence Reverberates

pp. 57-60

11. The Peculiar Science of Black Athletic Entropy

pp. 61-70

12. The Burden of Over-Representation, Curiously Borne by Woods and Jordan

pp. 71-74

13. Change Is Everywhere, or So It Seems

pp. 75-80

14. Change Is Everywhere, Even the NHL

pp. 81-84

15. Biting the Hand That Feeds Them

pp. 85-94

16. A Pause for a Cause

pp. 95-98

17. Ontological Exhaustion

pp. 99-102

18. Inverse Displacement

pp. 103-108

19. Love, Unrequited

pp. 109-114

20. From L.A. to Kenosha

pp. 115-116

21. Harmolodics

pp. 117-118

Acknowledgments

pp. 119-121

About the Author

pp. 122
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