Fit Citizens: A History of Black Women's Exercise from Post-Reconstruction to Postwar America
At the turn of the twentieth century, as African Americans struggled against white social and political oppression, Black women devised novel approaches to the fight for full citizenship. In opposition to white-led efforts to restrict their freedom of movement, Black women used various exercises-cal...
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Zusammenfassung: | At the turn of the twentieth century, as African Americans
struggled against white social and political oppression, Black
women devised novel approaches to the fight for full citizenship.
In opposition to white-led efforts to restrict their freedom of
movement, Black women used various exercises-calisthenics,
gymnastics, athletics, and walking-to demonstrate their physical
and moral fitness for citizenship. Black women's participation in
the modern exercise movement grew exponentially in the first half
of the twentieth century and became entwined with larger campaigns
of racial uplift and Black self-determination. Black newspapers,
magazines, advice literature, and public health reports all
encouraged this emphasis on exercise as a reflection of civic
virtue. In the first historical study of Black women's exercise,
Ava Purkiss reveals that physical activity was not merely a path to
self-improvement but also a means to expand notions of Black
citizenship. Through this narrative of national belonging, Purkiss
explores how exercise enabled Black women to reimagine Black
bodies, health, beauty, and recreation in the twentieth century.
Fit Citizens places Black women squarely within the
history of American physical fitness and sheds light on how African
Americans gave new meaning to the concept of exercising
citizenship. |
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DOI: | 10.1353/book.103208 |