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portada Strong Inside: Perry Wallace and the Collision of Race and Sports in the South
Type
Physical Book
Language
English
Pages
480
Format
Paperback
Dimensions
22.9 x 15.2 x 2.8 cm
Weight
0.72 kg.
ISBN13
9780826506924
Edition No.
0002

Strong Inside: Perry Wallace and the Collision of Race and Sports in the South

Andrew Maraniss (Author) · Vanderbilt University Press · Paperback

Strong Inside: Perry Wallace and the Collision of Race and Sports in the South - Maraniss, Andrew ; White, Derrick E. ; Moore, Louis

Physical Book

£ 21.24

  • Condition: New
Origin: U.S.A. (Import costs included in the price)
It will be shipped from our warehouse between Friday, June 07 and Tuesday, June 25.
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Synopsis "Strong Inside: Perry Wallace and the Collision of Race and Sports in the South"

New York Times Best Seller 2015 RFK Book Awards Special Recognition 2015 Lillian Smith Book Award 2015 AAUP Books Committee "Outstanding" Title When Strong Inside was first published ten years ago, no one could have predicted the impact the book would have on Vanderbilt University, Nashville, and communities across the nation. What began as a biography of Perry Wallace--the first African American basketball player in the Southeastern Conference (SEC)--became a catalyst for meaningful change and reconciliation between Wallace and the city that had rejected him. In this tenth-anniversary edition, scholars of race and sports Louis Moore and Derrick E. White provide a new foreword that places the story in the context of the study of sports and society, and author Andrew Maraniss adds a concluding chapter filling readers in on how events unfolded between Strong Inside's publication in 2014 and Perry Wallace's death in 2017 and exploring Wallace's continuing legacy. Wallace entered kindergarten the year that Brown v. Board of Education upended "separate but equal." As a twelve-year-old, he sneaked downtown to watch the sit-ins at Nashville's lunch counters. A week after Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech, Wallace entered high school, and later saw the passage of the Civil Rights and Voting Rights acts. On March 19, 1966, his Pearl High School basketball team won Tennessee's first integrated state tournament--the same day Adolph Rupp's all-white Kentucky Wildcats lost to the all-Black Texas Western Miners in an iconic NCAA title game. The world seemed to be opening up at just the right time, and when Vanderbilt recruited him, Wallace courageously accepted the assignment to desegregate the SEC. His experiences on campus and in the hostile gymnasiums of the Deep South turned out to be nothing like he ever imagined.

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