Sporting Justice
The Chatham Coloured All Stars and Black Baseball in Southwestern Ontario, 1915-1958
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Wilfrid Laurier University Press
Published:29th Feb '24
Should be back in stock very soon
“Miriam Wright’s hard-hitting analysis of Black baseball in Southern Ontario follows teams and players who contested the explicitly racialized social order of the early twentieth century. Drawing on testimony from Wilfred ‘Boomer’ Harding, Ferguson Jenkins Sr., King Terrell, and other Chatham Coloured All-Stars, this marvellous study follows their struggle for social justice on and off the field. With their 1934 Provincial Intermediate B Championship, the All-Stars rose above vicious racism to fashion a legacy of community and racial pride that continues to resonate. Brilliantly connecting baseball to memory, identity, and social meaning, Wright delivers a grand slam. This exemplary study is sport history as it should be crafted.” — Colin Howell, Department of History, Saint Mary’s University
“Sporting Justice is a unique study of a Canadian community rarely explored through the lens of sport, especially from a historical perspective. The narrative takes the reader through the highs and lows of Black Ontarian baseball teams in a captivating social history that makes an important contribution to the study of memory. In that process, the author engages with the oral histories of players, families, communities for whom baseball was a major, hard-fought fulcrum of social life. This book will be pertinent to historians as well as scholars in Black Studies and Cultural Studies.” —Ornella Nzindukiyimana, Department of Human Kinetics, St. Francis Xavier University
ISBN: 9781771125840
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 363g
264 pages