Primeros reseñadores

Different Strokes: Serena, Venus, and the Unfinished Black Tennis Revolution
The days of tennis as a country club sport for the aristocracy have long passed, as have the pre–Open era days when black players faced long odds just to be invited to the four Grand Slam events. An entire generation of sports fans has grown up seeing Venus and Serena Williams as the gold standard in American professional tennis. Although the Williams sisters have done more than any other players to make tennis accessible to a diverse population, it’s not as if the tennis revolution is over. When you watch tennis next, take a close look at the umpire, the person sitting in the high chair of authority at courtside. Look at the tournament referee and the tournament director, the officials who run the tournament. In those seats of power and influence, blacks are still woefully underrepresented. DIFFERENT STROKES chronicles the rise of the Williams sisters, as well as other champions of color, closely examining how African Americans are collectively faring in tennis, on the court and off. Despite the success of the Williams sisters and the election of former pro player Katrina Adams as the U.S. Tennis Association’s first black president, top black players still receive racist messages via social media and sometimes in public. The reality is that while significant progress has been made in the sport, much work remains before anything resembling equality is achieved.
Medios
Papel
Géneros
Biography & Memoir, Business, History, Nonfiction, Sports and Leisure
Ofrecido por
University of Nebraska Press (Editorial)
(User: newshelves)
Lote
April 2020
Comienza: 2020-04-06
Acabado: 2020-04-27
Rebajado
2020-02-01
País
Estados Unidos
Enlace
Página LibraryThing de la obra
Receipt
10 revisado, 2 marked received, 1 marked not received
Lote cerrado
15
copias
246
solicitudes