As soon as heavyweight boxer Joe Louis became a public figure in
the 1930s, journalists and other social commentators began
speculating about the significance of an African American man
garnering popularity in a racially segregated society. Both during
his lifetime and afterward, Louis noteriety extended beyond the
world of sports to American popular culture. Many falsely heralded
the boxer 's popularity as a sign that American racism was in sharp
decline, Louis heroic status, however, did not fully reflect the
complicated racial dynamics either within the sports world or in
America, in general.
In Joe Louis: Sports and Race in the Twentieth Century, Marcy
Sacks gives an account of the life of a man famous both for his
sports career and for his race. With excerpts from newspaper
clippings, radio broadcasts, poetry, and interviews, Sacks
contextualizes Louis life and the legacy he left behind.
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