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Forty Million Dollar Slaves

Arts: How sports stardom has brought black athletes wealth without progress and prosperity without freedom.

July 5, 2006


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$40 Million Slaves : The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of the Black Athlete
By William C. Rhoden
Crown. $23.95

Sports, for some, represent the best in humanity, where talent and muscle can transcend difference and prejudice: Jackie Robinson, Muhammed Ali, Althea Gibson—pioneers whose accomplishments beyond sports are legend. But these legends, says William Rhoden in Forty Million Dollar Slave may be just that, amounting to a crutch for modern day race relations. A New York Times sports columnist for decades, Rhoden chronicles a sweaty history that has meant wealth but not always progress, and prosperity for the black athlete—the $40 million slave—who is far from free.

Rhoden gives the bench players of history their due. Like Arthur "Rube" Foster who created baseball's Negro League in 1920, which still stands as the only sports operation owned, managed and played by blacks. Says Rhoden, "Integration in sports—as opposed to integration at the ballot box or in public conveyances—was a winning proposition for the whites who controlled the sports industrial complex." Foster was a pioneer of a different sort, "an uncomprising guiding light," ultimately undone by a nervous breakdown in 1926.

Today's legends, those with perceived "black power," like the deified Michael Jordan, seldom wield it. "What [Jordan] did to inspire the multitudes—that core of black people estranged from power, the seemingly permanent underclass—beyond hitting game winning jump shots, is hard to find," Rhoden writes.

Peppered with historical gems and did-you-knows, 40 Million Dollar Slaves weaves together the twin strands of innovation and struggle that today define adrenaline-filled arenas. Jackie Robinson actually integrated baseball in Canada, signing with Montreal in 1945, (the Dodgers bought his contract in 1947). The alley-oop was actually a football invention and horseracing and cycling were once dominated by African Americans.

It's the unsung heroes from Robert Molineaux to Foster to Curt Flood, dozens of stories of men (nearly all) whom we don’t know precisely because they sought change and often lost. And thus today Americans, of all races, pour $34 billion a year into sports—from ticket sales to merchandise—while just a sliver of those revenues go to the "black muscle" that creates it, and next to nothing goes into the communities from whence that muscle came.

Elizabeth Gettelman is research editor at Mother Jones.



 

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Comments:

i believe your book should be in african american studies in schools and colleges so that more people can read your book and learn more it i myself will get a copy soon thank you for writing this book because i would not know about the history that took place at all
Posted by:felicia W.July 31, 2007 6:42:14 PMRespond ^
Elizabeth, what a professionally written piece, you've given us on the book,$40 million dollar slave. I happened to stumble upon this while doing a paper on Black Jockeys. It's real enlightning to read a book like this. Elizabeth, did you know, African Americans horsemen played a vital role in shaping American Racing Turf history,showcasing their talents in the early Kentucky Derby? Thirteen of the fifteen riders in the first Derby were Black, and African American reinsmen won fifteen of the Derby's first twenty-eight runnings. I'm Proud to be African American. J.Briscoe Johnson
Posted by:Jerry Briscoe Johnson-L.AAugust 1, 2007 11:31:51 PMRespond ^
It must be that you are the smartes brother of our race or the rest of us are wearing blinders. How is it possible that as time passes and passes we (afican americans)fail to see what is so visible and not attempt to ripple the waters? Your next book should be titled "Take the money and run"
Posted by:Cecil DawkinsAugust 31, 2007 11:26:07 AMRespond ^
i totally agree how sports these is the new era of slavery. Back in the day watching slaves was a form of entertainment. Now we watch them in the nba,nfl...etc. But we pay them to work there butts off risk life injuries and all for a championship? Sure they are living the good life with all the fame and popularity but if you read between the lines african americans are still are slaves. I also have to mention I was totally baked out of my mind when i thought of this. =)
Posted by:tjApril 9, 2008 3:21:34 PMRespond ^
powerful
Posted by:LanaApril 30, 2008 9:44:30 PMRespond ^

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