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When Women Stood

The Untold History of Females Who Changed Sports and the World

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

An unapologetically candid and illuminating history of women and their fight for equality, told through the influential world of sports.

From early Amazons to modern-day athletes, women have been fighting for their rightful place in the world. The history of these female athletes—whether warriors on the battlefield or competitors in the sports arena—has often been neglected, yet it is through sports that women have changed society, gaining entry into education, travel, politics, and more.

When Women Stood is an eye-opening chronicle of the amazing women who refused to accept the status quo and fought for something better for themselves and for those who would follow. Featuring exclusive insight from athletes such as Jackie Joyner-Kersee, Kathrine Switzer, Nancy Lieberman, Briana Scurry, and Nancy Hogshead-Maker, this book includes the stories of female football players, Olympic athletes, powerlifters, and soccer stars, of historians, archeologists, crusaders, and scientists.

Women's sports history cannot be told without also telling the story of the fight for gender and racial equality, economics, medical biases, gay and transgender history, violence, religion, media, abuse, and activism. When Women Stood is the first to go beyond the record books and gold medal counts to truly dig into the vital role women and sports have played in instigating change in society as a whole. And it shows that, despite seemingly unsurmountable odds, the true spirit of the female athlete can never be restrained.

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    • Booklist

      November 1, 2022
      Allred, an athlete activist and professor of sports and exercise science, made sports history when she was named to the first U.S. women's bobsled team and won the U.S. Nationals in 1994, when she was four months pregnant. This well-documented book covers a lot of ground, tracing the traditional roles, challenges, and triumphs of women (not just female athletes) throughout history, from ancient Greece, Asia, and Africa to the modern day. Profiles are short and cover numerous sporting pioneers as well as public figures (Michelle Obama) who stepped up to move the needle forward. Topics include the suffragist movement, Title IX, lesbian and transgender athletes, race, and image exploitation. Allred celebrates women and their hard-earned advances on the playing field and in achieving personal freedom, but also delivers a striking reminder of how much work is yet to be done. A significant contribution to women's studies.

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 28, 2022
      Allred, who competed on the first U.S. women’s bobsled team in 1994, spotlights in her incisive debut a host of women in sports and their transformative accomplishments. The female athletes highlighted include household names, as well as those largely unknown, and race is often a factor. Black basketball player Alma English Byrd led her team to win the Arkansas state basketball championship in 1939, despite “having never played on a wood floor before the tournament”; high jumper Dorothy Cure was the first Black woman to set a national record in 1914 for the running broad jump; and tennis star Althea Gibson “transcended her sport during times of racial inequity and violence” and won both Wimbledon and the U.S. Nationals in the 1950s. Other chapters discuss how patriarchal ideas of modesty shaped the history of women’s sporting attire, detail polarizing public policies about the inclusion of transgender female athletes in women’s sports, and examine how second-wave feminism in the 1960s and 1970s emboldened women to compete in previously male-dominated sports. Allred’s prose is direct, and she lucidly explains how these pioneers have challenged gender and racial stereotypes. The result is an enlightening account of women trailblazers.

    • Library Journal

      January 1, 2023

      History is full of examples of women being excluded from activities and of their subsequent fight to participate. Allred's (kinesiology, Tarleton State Univ.; Atta Girl!: A Celebration of Women in Sport) is a former professional athlete who won the first U.S. Women's Bobsled Championship when she was more than four months pregnant. Her book focuses mainly on campaigns for equal opportunity in sports, but she also weaves in many of the other equality battles women fought at the same time. The book starts with the first recorded woman Olympian in 396 BC; she competed against men and won but was not allowed to participate in the trophy ceremony. The book covers many sports and the stories throughout the centuries of women who fought for the chance to compete. Allred includes discussions of the media's sexualized depiction of women athletes, the male-centric focus of sports medicine and nutrition, the creation and evolution of Title IX, and the additional barriers faced by Black, Latina, Indigenous, lesbian, and transgender athletes. VERDICT A fascinating and thorough history of the fight for women's rights told through the lens of sports. Will likely appeal to readers interested in sports history and gender studies.--Sara Holder

      Copyright 2023 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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