‘Scientific exponent of the art’ or ‘punching bag in chocolate’?: colonialism, race and precarity in the prizefighting and boxing career of Joe ‘Young Pluto’ Brown, c. 1872–1931

IF 0.5 Q4 HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM
Hendrik Snyders
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT Boxing and its predecessor, prizefighting, is a form of precarious labour and forms part of a broader field of work that young itinerant black men could participate in during the nineteenth century. Practised in an era of institutionalised racism, it was characterised by exploitative working arrangements and a high degree of precarity. These forces, encountered in North America, the British Empire and Europe, fundamentally shaped the careers of these fighters. This article traces the career of one such boxer, Josef ‘Young Pluto’ or ‘Joe Pluto’ Brown, a South African of mixed-race and the first to fight for an officially recognised World Boxing Champion Title. More significantly, though, his life serves as a means to cast a light on and help to inform a broader understanding of race, labour, sport, precarity and international migration in the nineteenth- and early twentieth century.
“艺术的科学代表”还是“巧克力沙袋”?殖民主义,种族和不稳定的职业生涯中的乔“年轻的布鲁托”布朗,约1872年至1931年
拳击及其前身职业拳击是一种不稳定的劳动,是19世纪年轻的流动黑人可以参与的更广泛的工作领域的一部分。在种族主义制度化的时代,它的特点是剥削性的工作安排和高度的不稳定性。这些在北美、大英帝国和欧洲遭遇的力量,从根本上塑造了这些战士的职业生涯。这篇文章追溯了一个这样的拳击手的职业生涯,约瑟夫“年轻的普路托”或“乔普路托”布朗,一个南非混血儿,第一个为官方认可的世界拳击冠军头衔而战。然而,更重要的是,他的一生有助于揭示并帮助人们更广泛地理解19世纪和20世纪初的种族、劳工、体育、不稳定和国际移民。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Sport in History
Sport in History HOSPITALITY, LEISURE, SPORT & TOURISM-
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
37.50%
发文量
29
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