Giants in the Frame: A 1964 Photo Analysis of How Malcolm X and Dr. Harry Edwards Connected Race, Religion, and Sport
Abstract
:1. America Is Built on Movements
2. Review of Literature
2.1. The Culture and Context of 1964
“…in recent years the former [the Black male athlete’s inherent physical superiority] has been subject to increasing emphasis due to the overwhelmingly disproportionate representation of black athletes on all-star rosters, on Olympic teams, in the various ‘most valuable player’ categories, and due to the black athletes’ overall domination of the highly publicized or so-called ‘major sports’—basketball football, baseball, track and field.”.
2.2. The Black Church and Religious Commitments to Black Advancement
2.3. Black Masculinity/Manhood in America
“From Malcolm’s perspective, armed resistance represented a crucial affirmation of black manhood. Rather than follow [Martin Luther] King’s emasculating philosophy, he argued, black men needed to regain their role as protectors of ‘their’ women and their families.”.
“So, we tried to cultivate the black youth movement. And when it comes down to black athletes, you’re talking about that level, that spectrum of black society that really the Black Panther Party was attempting to organize and coordinate. The churches did not really focus on that stratum of black youth. The Civil Rights Movement most certainly did not focus on that stratum of black youth. The two institutions that really cultivated that stratum of black youth were the military and the coaches, the athletic sector, because that’s where the athletes come from.”
2.4. Harry Edwards and Malcolm X
2.5. Image Representations of Black Men in American Culture
“His refusal to obey even the most basic rules for NBA team members, combined with his occasionally angry outbursts toward people in and around the court during games, fanned the flames of public fears about the sorts of rules for which he might harbor similar disregard in off-court settings. Ironically, the rules of which he was most frequently in violation in off-court settings had no relationship to actual acts of violence or criminality of any kind.”
2.6. Intersection of Visual Theories
“facilitate a more critical and analytical approach to the deployment of such material, enabling a more nuanced engagement with the visual and material culture of sport as a rich and valuable resource both to facilitate and to problematize explorations into sport’s many pasts.”
3. Method and Procedure
3.1. Photography and Visual Culture
3.2. Analysis and Broader Context of Images in Sport and Race
4. Discussion
“Eight out of ten black male video game characters are sports competitors; black males, thus, only find visibility in sports games. Just in larger society, the video game industry confines (and controls through image and ideology) black men to the virtual sports world, limiting the range and depth of imagery.”
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Griffin, W.; Harrison, C.K. Giants in the Frame: A 1964 Photo Analysis of How Malcolm X and Dr. Harry Edwards Connected Race, Religion, and Sport. Religions 2023, 14, 580. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050580
Griffin W, Harrison CK. Giants in the Frame: A 1964 Photo Analysis of How Malcolm X and Dr. Harry Edwards Connected Race, Religion, and Sport. Religions. 2023; 14(5):580. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050580
Chicago/Turabian StyleGriffin, Whitney, and C. Keith Harrison. 2023. "Giants in the Frame: A 1964 Photo Analysis of How Malcolm X and Dr. Harry Edwards Connected Race, Religion, and Sport" Religions 14, no. 5: 580. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050580
APA StyleGriffin, W., & Harrison, C. K. (2023). Giants in the Frame: A 1964 Photo Analysis of How Malcolm X and Dr. Harry Edwards Connected Race, Religion, and Sport. Religions, 14(5), 580. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050580