In 1926 Theodore "Tiger" Flowers became the first African American boxer to win the world middleweight title. The next year he was dead; the victim of surgery gone wrong. His funeral in Atlanta drew tens of thousands of mourners; black and white. Atlantans would not grieve again in comparable numbers until Martin Luther King Jr.'s assassination in 1968. Flowers; whose career was sandwiched between those of the better-known black boxers Jack Johnson and Joe Louis; was not America's first successful black athlete. He was; however; the first to generate widespread goodwill among whites; especially in the South; where he became known as "the whitest black man in the ring." he Pussycat of Prizefighting is more than an account of Flowers's remarkable achievements - it is a penetrating analysis of the cultural and historical currents that defined the terms of Flowers's success as both a man and an athlete. As we discover the sources of Flowers's immense popularity; Andrew Kaye also helps us to understand more deeply the pressures and dilemmas facing African Americans in the public eye.
#1211250 in Books 2015-07-08Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 8.45 x .75 x 5.64l; .0 #File Name: 0819575372308 pages
Review