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Journal of Sport & Social Issues
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The Construction of Black Masculinity

White Supremacy Now and Then

Abby L. Ferber

University of Colorado, Colorado Springs

How can a White supremacist nation, which subjects Black men to ongoing racism and demonization, at the same time admire and worship Black men as athletes? The author argues that key elements of White supremacy and the new racism are reinforced by popular representations of Black male athletes. In viewing far-Right White supremacist and sports cultures, two sites representing seemingly opposite ends of the spectrum of contemporary racism, the author examines the continuing significance of the historical image of the buck and the obsession with controlling and "taming" Black male bodies. The author examines four common themes that permeate the contemporary construction of Black masculinity and work to justify color-blind racism and inequality: a continued emphasis on Black bodies as inherently aggressive, hypersexual, and violent; concern with taming and controlling Black males; inequality depicted as a product of a deficient Black culture; and the naturalization of White supremacy and White male superiority.

Key Words: Black men • White supremacy • sport • masculinity

Journal of Sport & Social Issues, Vol. 31, No. 1, 11-24 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/0193723506296829


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