A Place on the Team: The Triumph and Tragedy of Title IX
A Place on the Team: The Triumph and Tragedy of Title IX
A Place on the Team: The Triumph and Tragedy of Title IX
Price: $17.88 FREE for Members
Type: eBook
Released: 2006
Page Count: 296
Format: pdf
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0691117691
ISBN-13: 9780691117690
User Rating: 5.0000 out of 5 Stars! (2 Votes)

From Publishers Weekly

After Title IX of the Higher Education Act passed in 1972, women's athletics began to change. While women's sports existed long before the amendment was passed, Title IX brought about more opportunities, more scholarships and more teams for women. But the first three decades after its passing were also marred with dark periods of protest and noncompliance and, to this day, Title IX remains a work in progress. All the highs and the lows, are extensively chronicled in Suggs's book, a must-read for any sports historian or female athlete interested in how the opportunities she so freely enjoys came about. But for every proponent of Title IX, there exists opposition, Suggs writes. "In mandating that women athletes be treated the same as men, the law encouraged women's sports to develop in the hypercompetitive, highly commercialized model that evolved in men's sports." He notes that others argued men's sports were being cut in order to comply with Title IX, creating conflict between male and female athletes and coaches. In 1976, Yale rowers made headlines when they stripped nude, "Title IX" written across their chests and backs, to protest the cutting of sports of "lesser importance," like crew, in colleges across the nation. "These are the bodies Yale is exploiting," the men said in a written statement. The awarding of scholarships was another critical change for women's college sports, making it possible for schools to recruit women for the sole purpose of playing on sports teams. As Title IX is celebrated and debated, Suggs's book, the most extensive on the subject, includes in-depth looks at pre- and post-Title IX athletics and clearly deciphers one of the most controversial laws in American history.
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Review


[A] must-read for any sports historian or female athlete interested in how the opportunities she so freely enjoys came about. -- Publishers Weekly


Ultimately a gripping story of Title IX's triumph. -- Harvard Law Review


Finally, a lucid, thorough and non-polemical accounting of Title IX's origins, development, and impact. Welch Suggs traces the women's sports revolution back to its roots in physical education, details Title IX's origins in civil rights law, and explains why the law has proven to be so resistant to legal challenge. He doesn't flinch from taking stock of the law's regrettable consequences. All future discussion of college sports and gender equity will begin with this book. -- Alexander Wolff, Sports Illustrated


Suggs provides brief histories of college sports, women's college sports administration, and civil rights legislation before wading into case law that Title IX begat. He makes sense of this convoluted, contentious journey through 2004 and fairly presents a range of feminist, conservative and libertarian viewpoints. -- Library Journal


With A Place on the Team, Suggs has done a service to anyone who wants to understand the history of Title IX and the debates that continue to swirl around its implementation. -- Michael A. Messner, Academe

J. Groethe (Utah) | 5 out of 5 Stars!
23/03/2010

This is a great book on the history of women's collegiate athletics and Title IX. As a high school girls' basketball coach, I picked up this book out of curiosity. I figured that since the title captured both triumph and tragedy, it might give an unbiased look into Title IX. I think the author accomplishes that quite well. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and I have already referenced back to it multiple times.

Welch Suggs reading and writing (Atlanta and Athens, GA USA) | 5 out of 5 Stars!
19/02/2006

Just to let people know, the very nice Publisher's Weekly review contains a fairly serious error. The reviewer states: "In 1976, Yale rowers made headlines when they stripped nude, "Title IX" written across their chests and backs, to protest the cutting of sports of 'lesser importance,' like crew, in colleges across the nation. 'These are the bodies Yale is exploiting,' the men said in a written statement."

This is not at all what happened. As commemorated in the film "A Hero for Daisy"--and noted in my book--female rowers at Yale were the ones who stripped, to protest the fact that they had no boathouse in which to change or store their equipment. The episode made national news. Just didn't want anyone to get the wrong impression.

Thanks!

Welch

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