I Fight for a Living

I Fight for a Living Boxing and the Battle for Black Manhood, 1880-1915

Paperback (11 Sep 2017)

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Publisher's Synopsis

The black prizefighter labored in one of the few trades where an African American man could win renown: boxing. His prowess in the ring asserted an independence and powerful masculinity rare for black men in a white-dominated society, allowing him to be a man--and thus truly free.

Louis Moore draws on the life stories of African American fighters active from 1880 to 1915 to explore working-class black manhood. As he details, boxers bought into American ideas about masculinity and free enterprise to prove their equality while using their bodies to become self-made men. The African American middle class, meanwhile, grappled with an expression of public black maleness they saw related to disreputable leisure rather than respectable labor. Moore shows how each fighter conformed to middle-class ideas of masculinity based on his own judgment of what culture would accept. Finally, he argues that African American success in the ring shattered the myth of black inferiority despite media and government efforts to defend white privilege.

Book information

ISBN: 9780252082870
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Imprint: University of Illinois Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 796.83
DEWEY edition: 22
Language: English
Number of pages: 240
Weight: 354g
Height: 159mm
Width: 253mm
Spine width: 23mm