Preliminary Conceptualization the Research Problem
WHAT | CONTENT | ||
1. | General Topic | Manifestation of Racism in the United States’ Boxing | |
2. | Sub-Topic |
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3. | Research Title | The Approaches to Racism in American Boxing. | |
4. | Main Research Question | How has racism changed over time in American boxing?
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5. | Secondary Research Question | Is racism in boxing still a problem in our contemporary society? | |
Background/Justification | Racism and racial segregation are a common phenomenon in many parts of the world. Although much has changed over time in the boxing realm, there is a possibility that racism still exists in America’s boxing. In fact, boxing in America in the 1950s onwards has been used as a political weapon to break the barrier of racism and the limitations the boxers have confronted. Understanding the topic of racism in boxing is key to eliminating the vices that exist in other sporting activities. Various questions that surround this sport activity have been raised including;
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6. | Sources | Articles
Roberts, R. (1983). Galveston’s Jack Johnson: Flourishing in the Dark. The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, 87(1), 37-56. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/30241079 Rodwan, J. (2011). The Fighting Life: Boxing and Identity in Novels by Philip Roth and Norman Mailer. Philip Roth Studies, 7(1), 83-96. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5703/philrothstud.7.1.83 RUNSTEDTLER, T. (2010). White Anglo-Saxon Hopes and Black Americans’ Atlantic Dreams: Jack Johnson and the British Boxing Colour Bar. Journal of World History, 21(4), 657-689. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/41060854 Washington, R., & Karen, D. (2001). Sport and Society. Annual Review of Sociology, 27, 187-212. Retrieved from http://www.jstor.org/stable/2678619 Books R. (2013). Jack Johnson, rebel sojourner: Boxing in the shadow of the global color line. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press
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