A unique biography of Jim Brown--football legend, Hollywood star, and controversial activist--written by acclaimed sports journalist Dave Zirin. Jim Brown is recognized as perhaps the greatest football player to ever live. But his phenomenal nine-year career with the Cleveland Browns is only part of his remarkable story, the opening salvo to a much more sprawling epic. Brown parlayed his athletic fame into stardom in Hollywood, where it was thought that he could become "the black John Wayne." He was an outspoken Black Power icon in the 1960s, and he formed Black Economic Unions to challenge racism in the business world. For this and for his decades of work as a truce negotiator with street gangs, Brown--along with such figures as Muhammad Ali, Bill Russell, and Billie Jean King--is revered as a socially conscious athlete. On the most hypermasculine cultural canvases of the United States--NFL football, the Black Power movement, Hollywood's blaxploitation films, gang intervention both inside and outside prison walls--Jim Brown has made his mark. Yet in the landscape of the most toxic expression of "what makes a man"--numerous accusations of violence against women--he has left a jagged mark as well. Dave Zirin's book redefines an American icon, and not always in a flattering light. At eighty-one years old, Brown continues to speak out and look for fights. His recent public support of Donald Trump and criticism of Colin Kaepernick are just the latest examples of someone who seems restless if he is not in conflict. Jim Brown is a raw and thrilling account of Brown's remarkable life and a must-read for sports fans and students of the black freedom struggle.
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bookclub4m nonfiction entertainment genre
My god that was a tough read in spots. I picked this up because I thought “sports star to actor? Sure that sounds like the entertainment industry” but of course with a Black man during a tumultuous time in the United States, ongoing protests going on right now, and the history of domestic abuse and rage in a time of #metoo this all feels very current.
Brown was a hard man with a hardline on life. Zirin pulls out the complicated interaction of toxic masculinity, civil rights, and the history of the United States in a really engaging way. How do you deal with a person who forces introspection in gang members to lead them out of crime but refuses to admit to his own flaws? Complains that Black althetes don't do enough to lift up their communities and then disparages political protest like kneeling during the anthem? Supports Trump because the man promises support for Black business? In any case, the reader comes out with a real appreciation for how much difference there was and is as to the conversation around the best way to bring equality to Black communities in the United States.