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Sports
Wars
Athletes in the Age of Aquarius
David W. Zang
Now in paperback!
How sports became a cultural battleground
for arguments about sacrifice, authority, manliness, and victory
with
honor.
A revealing
look into American life in the turbulent 1960s.
Choice Outstanding Academic Title 2002
The Vietnam era's tensionsbetween tradition and new possibilities,
black and white, young and old, male and femalewere played
out on the field of professional and organized sports. SportsWars shows
that the century-old position of sports as the standard-bearer
for American values, and as a central way of building character,
made it a prime target in this time of general disenchantment.
Critics began to challenge not only individual abuses but sport's
very ideals, and for the first time these critics included athletes
themselves. Zang locates a variety of larger cultural debates within
professional sports and organized sports more generally: changing
valuations of hard work and the physical, winning versus character,
and challenges to authority. He also considers the relationships
between sports and other domains of popular culture, including
the counterculture, rock and roll, and Hollywood.
Praise for SportsWars:
"I loved it, loved almost every page. What I
like most is the literary quality of the writingand the rich
cultural context and the wonderful stories. Bewitching, and perfectly
crafted."
Randy Roberts
author of Winning Is the Only Thing: Sports in America Since 1945 and Where
the Domino Fell: America and Vietnam, 1945 to 1990
"This is history served fresh, a wonderful read,
unsentimental and smart, that opens windows on the sixties as well
as on sports."
Robert Lipsyte, New York Times
"Dave Zang in one our most astute observers of
sport and American culture. He knows the sixties and he knows sports
and he has brought them together in a lively, lucid narrative.
SportsWars is a first rate book."
Jules Tygiel, author of Baseball's
Great Experiment: Jackie Robinson and His Legacy
"A wonderful book! Zang captures the emotionsanxiety,
anger, heartbreak and hopeand the people that made sports
in the 60's so dramatic. And he does it with such style."
Bill Walton, Basketball Hall of
Fame, Academic All America
“A fascinating book . . .
a unique and thought-provoking look back at an exciting and troubled
time.”
—David Pitt, Booklist
“SportsWars is a deeply satisfying work of both sport history
and cultural criticism. Moreover, it is as compulsively readable
as it is intellectually shrewd.”
—Michael Oriard, author of
Reading Football:
How the Popular Press Created an American Spectacle
2001
6" x 9"
192 pages, 22 black and white photos
$29.95 cloth, 1-55278-713-9
$19.95 paper, 1-55278-770-8
David W. Zang is a sports historian and Director
of Sport Studies at Towson University. He is also the author
of Fleet Walker's Divided Heart: The Life of Baseball's
First Black Major Leaguer (Nebraska, 1995).
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