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Few areas of study offer more insight into American culture than
competitive sports. The games played throughout this nation's
history dramatically illuminate social, economic, and cultural
developments, from the balance of power in world affairs to
changing conceptions of race, gender, and sexuality. Teaching U.S.
History through Sports provides strategies for incorporating sports
into any U.S. history curriculum. Drawing upon their own classroom
experiences, the authors suggest creative ways to use sports as a
lens to examine a broad range of historical subjects, including
Puritan culture, the rise of Jim Crow, the Cold War, the civil
rights movement, and the women's movement. Essays focus on the
experiences of African American women, working-class southerners,
Latinos, and members of LGBTQ communities, as well as topics
including the controversy over Native American mascots and the
globalization of U.S. sports.
Few areas of study offer more insight into American culture than
competitive sports. The games played throughout this nation's
history dramatically illuminate social, economic, and cultural
developments, from the balance of power in world affairs to
changing conceptions of race, gender, and sexuality. Teaching U.S.
History through Sports provides strategies for incorporating sports
into any U.S. history curriculum. Drawing upon their own classroom
experiences, the authors suggest creative ways to use sports as a
lens to examine a broad range of historical subjects, including
Puritan culture, the rise of Jim Crow, the Cold War, the civil
rights movement, and the women's movement. Essays focus on the
experiences of African American women, working-class southerners,
Latinos, and members of LGBTQ communities, as well as topics
including the controversy over Native American mascots and the
globalization of U.S. sports.
American public universities suffered tremendous funding cuts
during the 1930s, yet they were also responsible for educating
increasing numbers of students. The mounting financial troubles,
coupled with a perceived increase in the number of "radical"
student activists, contributed to a general sense of crisis on
American college campuses. University leaders used their athletic
programs to combat this crisis and to preserve "traditional"
American values and institutions, prescribing different models for
men and women. Educators emphasized the competitive nature of men's
athletics, seeking to inculcate male college athletes (and their
audiences) with individualistic, masculine values in order to
reinforce the existing American political and economic systems. In
stark contrast, the prevailing model of women's college athletics
taught a communal form of democracy. Strongly supported by almost
all female athletic leaders, this "a girl for every game, and a
game for every girl" model had replaced the more competitive model
that had been popular until the 1920s. The new programs denied
women individual attention and high-level competition, and they
promoted the development of what was considered proper femininity.
Whatever larger purposes these programs were intended to serve,
they could not have survived without vocal supporters. Democratic
Sports tells the important story of how men's and women's college
athletic programs survived, and even thrived, during the most
challenging decade of the twentieth century.
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