Lester Walton’s Champion: Black America’s Uneasy Relationship with Jack Johnson

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In 1908 Jack Johnson became the first black heavyweight boxing champion of the world. His reign would be rife with controversy, leading to widespread racial violence and draconian government intervention. Lester Walton, theater critic for the New York Age, became obsessed with Johnson; his extensive writing on the boxer powerfully reveals not just Walton’s own struggle with issues of race in America, but sheds light on the difficulties the black community at large faced in trying to make sense of a figure who simultaneously represented hope for the positive change Reconstruction failed to produce and, ironically, also threatened to intensify … continued below

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McKee, Dave August 2013.

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  • McKee, Dave

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In 1908 Jack Johnson became the first black heavyweight boxing champion of the world. His reign would be rife with controversy, leading to widespread racial violence and draconian government intervention. Lester Walton, theater critic for the New York Age, became obsessed with Johnson; his extensive writing on the boxer powerfully reveals not just Walton’s own struggle with issues of race in America, but sheds light on the difficulties the black community at large faced in trying to make sense of a figure who simultaneously represented hope for the positive change Reconstruction failed to produce and, ironically, also threatened to intensify the hardships of Jim Crow era oppression.

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  • August 2013

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  • March 8, 2015, 5:44 p.m.

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  • Nov. 16, 2016, 2:20 p.m.

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McKee, Dave. Lester Walton’s Champion: Black America’s Uneasy Relationship with Jack Johnson, thesis, August 2013; Denton, Texas. (https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc500142/: accessed May 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, UNT Digital Library, https://digital.library.unt.edu; .

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