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Forty Million Dollar Slaves: The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of the Black Athlete » (Reprint)

Book cover image of Forty Million Dollar Slaves: The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of the Black Athlete by William C. Rhoden

Authors: William C. Rhoden
ISBN-13: 9780307353146, ISBN-10: 0307353141
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Crown Publishing Group
Date Published: July 2007
Edition: Reprint

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Author Biography: William C. Rhoden

William C. Rhoden has been a sportswriter for the New York Times since 1983, and has written the “Sports of the Times” column for more than a decade. He also serves as a consultant for ESPN’s SportsCentury series, and occasionally appears as a guest on their show The Sports Reporters. In 1996, Rhoden won a Peabody Award for Broadcasting as writer of the HBO documentary Journey of the African-American Athlete. A graduate of Morgan State University in Baltimore, he lives in New York City’s Harlem with his wife and daughter.

From the Hardcover edition.

Book Synopsis

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 Forty Million Dollar 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 founder. 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, Forty Million Dollar Slaves is an eye-opening exploration of a metaphor we only thought we knew.

The New York Times - Warren Goldstein

In his provocative, passionate, important and disturbing book - part memoir, part history, part journalism - William C. Rhoden, a sports columnist for The New York Times, builds a historical framework that both accounts for the varieties of African-American athletic experience in the past and continues to explain them today.

Table of Contents

Ch. 1The race begins : the dilemma of illusion11
Ch. 2The plantation : the dilemma of physical bondage35
Ch. 3The jockey syndrome : the dilemma of exclusion63
Ch. 4The Negro leagues : the dilemma of myopia99
Ch. 5Integration : the dilemma of inclusion without power127
Ch. 6Style : the dilemma of appropriation147
Ch. 7The conveyor belt : the dilemma of alienation171
Ch. 8The River Jordan : the dilemma of neutrality197
Ch. 9Ain't I a woman? : the dilemma of the double burden219
Ch. 10The $40 million slave : the dilemma of wealth without control231
Ch. 11The one who got away? : the dilemma of ownership247

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