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Memphis Hoops - Race and Basketball in the Bluff City,1968-1997 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,113
Discovery Miles 11 130
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Memphis Hoops - Race and Basketball in the Bluff City,1968-1997 (Hardcover)
Series: Sports & Popular Culture
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Memphis Hoops tells the story of basketball in Tennessee's
southwestern-most metropolis following the 1968 assassination of
Marin Luther King Jr. Keith Brian Wood examines the city through
the lens of the Memphis State University basketball team and its
star playerturned-coach Larry Finch. Finch, a Memphis native and
the first highly recruited black player signed by Memphis State,
helped the team make the 1973 NCAA championship game in his senior
year. In an era when colleges in the south began to integrate their
basketball programs, the city of Memphis embraced its flagship
university's shift toward including black players. Wood interjects
the forgotten narrative of LeMoyne-Owen's (the city's HBCU) 1975
NCAA Division III National Championship team as a critical piece to
understanding this era. Finch was drafted by the Lakers following
the 1973 NCAA championship but instead signed with the American
Basketball Association's Memphis Tams. After two years of playing
professionally, Finch returned to the sidelines as a coach and
would eventually become the head coach of the Memphis State Tigers.
Wood deftly weaves together basketball and Memphis's fraught race
relations during the post-civil rights era. While many Memphians
viewed the 1973 Tigers' championship run as representative of
racial progress, Memphis as a whole continued to be deeply divided
on other issues of race and civil rights. And while Finch was
championed as a symbol of the healing power of basketball that
helped counteract the city's turbulence, many black players and
coaches would discover that even its sports mirrored Memphis's
racial divide. Today, as another native son of Memphis, Penny
Hardaway, has taken the reigns of the University of Memphis's
basketball program, Wood reflects on the question of progress in
the city that saw King's assassination little more than forty years
ago. In this important examination of sports and civil rights
history, Wood summons social memory from an all-too-recent past to
present the untold-and unfinished-story of basketball in the Bluff
City.
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