Description:
From Jackie Robinson to Muhammad Ali and Arthur Ashe, African American
athletes have been at the center of modern culture, their on-the-field
heroics admired and stratospheric earnings envied. But for all their
money, fame, and achievement, says New York Times columnist William C.
Rhoden, black athletes still find themselves on the periphery of true
power in the multibillion-dollar industry their talent built.
Provocative and controversial, Rhoden’s $40 Million Slaves
weaves a compelling narrative of black athletes in the United States,
from the plantation to their beginnings in nineteenth-century boxing
rings and at the first Kentucky Derby to the history-making
accomplishments of notable figures such as Jesse Owens, Althea Gibson,
and Willie Mays. Rhoden makes the cogent argument that black
athletes’ “evolution” has merely been a
journey from literal plantations—where sports were introduced
as diversions to quell revolutionary stirrings—to
today’s figurative ones, in the form of collegiate and
professional sports programs. Weaving in his own experiences growing up
on Chicago’s South Side, playing college football for an
all-black university, and his decades as a sportswriter, Rhoden
contends that black athletes’ exercise of true power is as
limited today as when masters forced their slaves to race and fight.
The primary difference is, today’s shackles are often of
their own making.
Every advance made by black athletes, Rhoden explains, has been met
with a knee-jerk backlash—one example being Major League
Baseball’s integration of the sport, which stripped the
black-controlled Negro League of its talent and left it to flounder. He
details the “conveyor belt” that brings kids from
inner cities and small towns to big-time programs, where
they’re cut off from their roots and exploited by team
owners, sports agents, and the media. He also sets his sights on
athletes like Michael Jordan, who he says have abdicated their
responsibility to the community with an apathy that borders on treason.
Sweeping and meticulously detailed, $40 Million Slaves is an
eye-opening exploration of a metaphor we only thought we knew.
Forty Million Dollar Slaves
The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of the Black Athlete
by William C. Rhoden
ISBN:
9780307353146
ISBN-10:
0307353141
Publisher:
Three Rivers Press (Random House)
Publication Date:
2007
Format:
Trade Paperback, 304 pages
Book Type:
New
This book is available in a Hardcover edition:
Forty Million Dollar
Slaves [HC]