Marknadens största urval
Snabb leverans

Their Day in the Sun

- Women of the 1932 Olympics

Om Their Day in the Sun

The 1932 Olympic games took place in Los Angeles in the depths of the Great Depression; that they were held at all falls barely short of miraculous. The United States sent thirty-seven women to competeΓÇöseventeen swimmers, seventeen track and field athletes, and three fencers. It was not easy, and far from acceptable, for a woman to be an athlete in 1932. As late as April 1931 the International Olympic Committee seriously considered eliminating womenΓÇÖs events. The young Americans did their part to capture the imagination of spectators and reporters. Through the sports press they catapulted the Olympic Games and womenΓÇÖs athletics into the nationΓÇÖs consciousness as never before. Doris Pieroth creates vivid portraits of the women, including the great Babe Didrikson, the confident and outspoken track and field star; Tidye Pickett, one of only two African American women who represented the United States despite encountering racial discrimination; and Helene Madison, winner of three gold medals in swimming, who returned triumphantly to SeattleΓÇÖs West Green Lake BeachΓÇöas a hotdog vendor (park department rules barred women from teaching swimming). The team truly represented AmericaΓÇöa democratic cross-section from New York to California, Washington to Florida, Minnesota to Texas and points in between. Drawn from public pools, schools and playgrounds, municipal and industrial recreation programs, and private clubs alike it reflected the countryΓÇÖs entire socio-economic spectrum. Their attainments and triumphs went a long way toward insuring that womenΓÇÖs events would continue as an integral part of the Olympic GamesΓÇöa prospect by no means certain in 1932. PierothΓÇÖs account is drawn from interviews with eleven of the women athletes, family members, other Olympians of the era, and witnesses of the 1932 games. She also quotes extensively from contemporary journalists such as Paul Gallico, Westbrook Pegler, and Damon Runyon, whose mixture of condescension, fulsome admiration for the ΓÇ£glamour girlΓÇ¥ swimmers, and genuine, if sometimes grudging, admiration for the accomplishments of the athletes provides an intriguing view of the stereotypes these Olympic contestants were challenging. Their Day in the Sun: Women of the 1932 Olympics is the story of those remarkable peopleΓÇötheir dedication and their delight in competition. In recounting their Olympic summer and their varied routes to Los Angeles, it adds to the history of sport the identities and details of a specific athletic cohort and their experiences in striving for excellence and acceptance.

Visa mer
  • Språk:
  • Engelska
  • ISBN:
  • 9780295975542
  • Format:
  • Häftad
  • Sidor:
  • 208
  • Utgiven:
  • 1. oktober 1996
  • Mått:
  • 152x229x13 mm.
  • Vikt:
  • 318 g.
  Fri leverans
Leveranstid: 2-4 veckor
Förväntad leverans: 23. maj 2025

Beskrivning av Their Day in the Sun

The 1932 Olympic games took place in Los Angeles in the depths of the Great Depression; that they were held at all falls barely short of miraculous. The United States sent thirty-seven women to competeΓÇöseventeen swimmers, seventeen track and field athletes, and three fencers. It was not easy, and far from acceptable, for a woman to be an athlete in 1932. As late as April 1931 the International Olympic Committee seriously considered eliminating womenΓÇÖs events. The young Americans did their part to capture the imagination of spectators and reporters. Through the sports press they catapulted the Olympic Games and womenΓÇÖs athletics into the nationΓÇÖs consciousness as never before.
Doris Pieroth creates vivid portraits of the women, including the great Babe Didrikson, the confident and outspoken track and field star; Tidye Pickett, one of only two African American women who represented the United States despite encountering racial discrimination; and Helene Madison, winner of three gold medals in swimming, who returned triumphantly to SeattleΓÇÖs West Green Lake BeachΓÇöas a hotdog vendor (park department rules barred women from teaching swimming).
The team truly represented AmericaΓÇöa democratic cross-section from New York to California, Washington to Florida, Minnesota to Texas and points in between. Drawn from public pools, schools and playgrounds, municipal and industrial recreation programs, and private clubs alike it reflected the countryΓÇÖs entire socio-economic spectrum. Their attainments and triumphs went a long way toward insuring that womenΓÇÖs events would continue as an integral part of the Olympic GamesΓÇöa prospect by no means certain in 1932.
PierothΓÇÖs account is drawn from interviews with eleven of the women athletes, family members, other Olympians of the era, and witnesses of the 1932 games. She also quotes extensively from contemporary journalists such as Paul Gallico, Westbrook Pegler, and Damon Runyon, whose mixture of condescension, fulsome admiration for the ΓÇ£glamour girlΓÇ¥ swimmers, and genuine, if sometimes grudging, admiration for the accomplishments of the athletes provides an intriguing view of the stereotypes these Olympic contestants were challenging.
Their Day in the Sun: Women of the 1932 Olympics is the story of those remarkable peopleΓÇötheir dedication and their delight in competition. In recounting their Olympic summer and their varied routes to Los Angeles, it adds to the history of sport the identities and details of a specific athletic cohort and their experiences in striving for excellence and acceptance.

Användarnas betyg av Their Day in the Sun



Hitta liknande böcker
Boken Their Day in the Sun finns i följande kategorier:

Gör som tusentals andra bokälskare

Prenumerera på vårt nyhetsbrev för att få fantastiska erbjudanden och inspiration för din nästa läsning.