Home
About Us
Company Profile
Careers
Directions
Search By...
Subject
Series
Author
New Releases
Upcoming Titles
Catalog PDFs
Reviews
Awards
Top Sellers
News & Events
Author Experts
In the News
Book Exhibits
Author Events
Contact Us
Author Page
Submit a Book Proposal
Ordering Information
Sales & Customer Service
Textbook Examination & Desk Copy Requests
Permissions Requests
Paperback & Foreign Language Rights
Shopping Cart
Mailing List
Help
My Account
Wish List
Quick Search
Advanced Search
Print
-
Close Window
www.greenwood.com/catalog/C9964.aspx
Browse Subjects
Electronic Products
Electronic Products home
American Mosaic
Daily Life Online
Pop Culture Universe
Praeger Security International online
The Reader's Advisor Online
Ebooks
ARBAonline
Authors4Teens
Children's Magazine Guide Online
Index to Current Urban Documents
Greenwood Press
Greenwood Press home
High School Reference
Advanced Placement
College Reference
Public Library Reference
Praeger
Praeger home
ACE/Praeger Series on Higher Education
Praeger Perspectives
Praeger Handbooks
Journal of Accounting, Auditing, and Finance
Praeger Security International
PSI home
Praeger Security International online
Books
Libraries Unlimited
LU.com home
The Reader's Advisor Online
ARBAonline
Children's Magazine Guide Online
Crinkles Magazine
School Library Media Activities Monthly
Teacher Ideas Press
Greenwood World Publishing
International
International home
Greenwood World Publishing
All Greenwood Products
Home
»
Catalog
» My Life and Battles
Book flyer
MS Word
International
MS Word
My Life and Battles
By Jack Johnson
Christopher Rivers
,
Jack Johnson
Foreword by Geoffrey C. Ward
Book Code:
C9964
ISBN:
0-275-99964-5
ISBN-13:
978-0-275-99964-3
DOI:
DOI:10.1336/0275999645
152 pages
Praeger Publishers
Publication:
9/30/2007
List Price:
$39.95
(
UK Sterling Price: £22.95
)
Availability:
In Stock
Media Type:
Hardcover
Also Available:
Ebook
Trim Size:
6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Subjects:
Multicultural Studies
»
Black Studies
Reviews:
Those interested in boxing history, particularly as it pertains to African Americans, have been treated to a spate of recent books on the social history of the ring. Most center on a major figure--Joe Louis, Tiger Flowers, Battling Siki, Jack Johnson--and the conflicted history of race relations in the US. These books are now joined by a bibliographic curiosity, an autobiography by Johnson (1878-1946) first published in French (surely with the help of a French collaborator working from Johnson's written or dictated words) as Mes Combats (1914). Rivers translated that book as well as articles that appeared in 1911, creating this amalgam autobiography. In a foreword, Geoffrey Ward (Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson, CH, Mar'05, 42-4096) praises the book as a "portrait of Johnson as he ... wished to be portrayed ... : intelligent, proud, extremely gifted, in control, and at the top of his game." Though it should be used with caution, this is a fresh source on Johnson, despite the errors, inconsistencies, and exaggerations of the as-told-to genre. It includes a chronology, photographs, an advertisement for the original work, and endnotes that take up flaws in the original. Recommended. Researchers; discerning fans.
—Choice
March 2008
An interesting slice of boxing history.
—SecondsOut.com
May 19, 2008
Johnson was the first African American sports icon, under his own methods and on his own terms. His autobiography, an amalgam formed from a series of autobiographical articles for the magazine
La vie au grand air
in 1911, reveals his finesse in handling his opponents, in and out of the ring, and the mythology necessary to his public identity. His skills included a rare ability to balance self-deprecating humor and supreme self-confidence, and Rivers....captures that balance in this skillful and engaging translation.
—SciTech Book News
February 2008
Endorsement From Randy Roberts,
Professor of History, Purdue University
Author of
Papa Jack: Jack Johnson and the Era of White Hopes
:
Christopher Rivers gives a revealing look at Jack Johnson when he was at the top of his profession. It is Jack Johnson as Jack Johnson wanted the world to see him--proud, humorous, defiant, and not too concerned with literal truth, or why he should scrape and bow to the mundane world of facts. He was, after all, his own creation.
Endorsement From Joyce Carol Oates,
Roger S. Berlind Distinguished Professor of the Humanities,
Princeton University:
Of all American boxers, there has been no one like Jack Johnson. Surely this extraordinary man is the most eloquent of all, and, with Archie Moore, the most intelligent. Chris Rivers is to be commended for so capably translating this remarkable document.
Description:
African American historian Gerald Early refers to Jack Johnson (1878-1946), the first African American heavyweight champion of the world, as "the first African American pop culture icon." Johnson is a seminal and iconic figure in the history of race and sport in America. This manuscript is the translation of a memoir by Johnson that was published in French, has never before been translated, and is virtually unknown. Originally published as a series of articles in 1911 and then in revised form as a book in 1914, it covers Johnson's colorful life and battles, both inside and outside the ring, up until and including his famous defeat of Jim Jeffries in Reno, on July 4, 1910, in one of the great iconic ring battles of the early 20th century.
In addition to the fights themselves, the memoir recounts, among many other things, Johnson's brief and amusing career as a local politician in Galveston, Texas; his experience hunting kangaroos in Australia; and his epic bouts of seasickness. It includes portraits of some of the most famous boxers of the 1900-1915 era--such truly legendary figures as Joe Choynski, Jim Jeffries, Sam McVey, Bob Fitzsimons, Philadelphia Jack O'Brien, and Stanley Ketchel. Johnson comments explicitly on race and "the color line" in boxing and in American society at large in ways that he probably would not have in a publication destined for an American reading public. The text constitutes genuinely new, previously unavailable material and will be of great interest for the many readers intrigued by Jack Johnson. In addition to providing information about Johnson's life, it is a fascinating exercise in self-mythologizing that provides substantial insights into how Johnson perceived himself and wished to be perceived by others. Johnson's personal voice comes through clearly-brash, clever, theatrical, and invariably charming. The memoir makes it easy to see how and why Johnson served as an important role model for Muhammad Ali and why so many have compared the two.
LC Card Number:
2007028401
LCC Class:
GV1132
Dewey Class:
796
PDF Catalogs:
Greenwood Multicultural Spring 2008.pdf
New Release
The Wall Street Primer
Reviews
Web 2.0 and Beyond
Top Seller
Advertising 2.0
All rights reserved. Copyright © 1999-
2008
Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc.
88 Post Road West, Westport CT 06881, (203) 226-3571