Eric Allen Hall is the author of the new book Arthur Ashe: Tennis and Justice in the Civil Rights Era. He is an assistant professor in the history department at Georgia Southern University, Statesboro.
Q: Why did you decide to write about Arthur Ashe?
A: I’ve always been interested in sports. I grew up in a
suburb bordering the South Side of Chicago; it was racially diverse. I knew I
always wanted to do something about sports….At Purdue, I was working under
Randy Roberts, who’s written on the boxer Jack Johnson and Joe Louis, and I
figured I’d do a topic involving sports.
My wife is a professor in the department as well; she was in
graduate school at the University of Michigan, and we were walking the streets,
thinking of a topic [for my graduate seminar paper] on African Americans in
popular culture, and she suggested, What about Arthur Ashe? Has anybody written
on him?
At the time, my reaction was, of course--but in the academic
sense, nobody really had. The more work I did on him, I realized what a
multi-layered, nuanced character he was. He didn’t fit the traditional mold of
an African-American athlete. It went from a seminar paper to a dissertation to
the book. It grew out of my love of sports, and I grew up around issues of
race, around people who weren’t like me.
Q: Was there anything that particularly surprised you as you
researched the book?
A: I was really surprised at how much of an intellectual he
was. You get athletes, entertainers, celebrities who have a machine behind them
[producing an image]. With Ashe, this was someone who really thought and felt
deeply about the issues of the day. He was reading government reports,
scholarly monographs. When he did finally speak out on these issues, he brought
a tool kit from all his reading. He was able to go toe-to-toe with academics.
Q: As you describe in the book, Ashe was criticized for his
civil rights activism by opponents of the civil rights movement, as well as on
the other side, by those who thought he wasn’t doing enough for the movement.
Why did he choose the middle course he did?
A: It was kind of a long journey for him. Ashe shows that
people aren’t static. You need to locate them at different points in their growth.
He grew up in a segregated city, Richmond, and was told, Don’t challenge the
status quo; it’s the best way to survive.
Then he went off to Los Angeles, and it was different. He
started to talk to people in the movement—the civil rights movement, the Free
Speech movement. He became a bit more radicalized by being at UCLA. He also
spent some time in the Army, which had a strict code prohibiting him from
speaking out. He came to the position he did—he believed you should always talk
to people even if they are saying things you disagree with.
People ask me a lot recently, with LeBron James and Derrick
Rose and other athletes making political statements now—he wasn’t one to make
political statements on the court. On the court, he just played tennis. It’s a
conflation of all these different forces. He took a path that was a little more
conservative than Martin Luther King’s, more gradual.
Q: Why did Ashe settle on South African apartheid as a place
to take a strong stand, and what was his impact?
A: He settled on it for a couple of reasons. There was the
decision made by the South African government to deny him a visa, that directly
affected him….in this case, he was one of the top players in the world, and he
was denied entry to play in the South African Open, a very lucrative [event]—it
wasn’t a rinky-dink tournament. It drew him in, because it directly affected
him.
Secondly, he saw the plight of South Africans as being worse
than any conditions African Americans were suffering from in the U.S. In the
townships, he saw utter poverty and hopelessness that he saw in the U.S., but
so much worse. He wore a T-shirt from time to time that said Citizen of the
World. He thought of people of color in an international sense.
His impact was fairly significant in South Africa, a
sports-crazed society….He didn’t just go play there, he toured Soweto, he met
with black journalists. Mark Mathabane, who wrote Kaffir Boy, remembers going
to see Ashe play in Ellis Park. To him, it made a big difference that an African-American
man was not only in South Africa, but was paying attention to the local
population.
Q: I wanted to ask you about Ashe’s feelings about women
tennis players—it seems from the book that he didn’t have positive feelings
about their equal rights.
A: That’s the one blot on his record. It’s tough to
understand why, but tennis was a very sexist sport at the time, and it was
compounded by the fact that the men and women [players] were around each other
a lot more than many other sports. At the time, the idea was that the men
tennis players were out there supporting families, and the women were already
supported, and were taking money away from the men …
The figures surrounding him when he was young were all men;
his mother died when he was very young. His mentors were all men…. Ella Baker,
a major leader in the civil rights movement, accused Martin Luther King of
being a sexist. There was a level of sexism in the culture as a whole. It
doesn’t excuse him—if you’re advocating for human rights, why doesn’t it apply
to gender? Before he died, he realized that was an inappropriate position to
take.
Q: How did his early death from AIDS affect his legacy and
how people think of his life?
A: There’s the one year after he announced he had AIDS
[until his death], and then from 1993 to the present. Sadly, his AIDS diagnosis
and death from AIDS has overshadowed a lot of his civil rights activism. If you
ask people on the street, they’ll say he was a good tennis player and he died
of AIDS. When certain anniversaries come up, they highlight AIDS and tennis,
but don’t look so much at civil rights.
He knew in 1988 that he had AIDS, but he waited [to reveal
it]; he said he wanted to protect his daughter. It was in part to protect his
family, [but also] he was so involved in giving speeches and traveling to South
Africa. He would not have been able to enter the country if it had been
disclosed. To a large extent, AIDS has overshadowed [other issues]. He said his
biggest burden was race, not AIDS.
Especially with the demonstrations by athletes about
Ferguson and Eric Garner, people are looking at him as an athlete who stood up
to injustice way back when. It’s unfair that AIDS came to define him.
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I’m going to write a shorter book, half as long, on the
history of the Black Sox scandal, the Chicago White Sox in 1919, and use the
Black Sox as a window into America in 1919 to talk about strikes, race riots,
the rise of tabloid journalism, and postwar disillusionment: If baseball can be
corrupted, what can’t?
Q: Anything else we should know about the Arthur Ashe book?
A: Relating it to the activism we’ve seen in the past month
or so, [some of the coverage] drives me nuts because all these athletes-- the
six St. Louis Rams’ raised hands--somehow this is new and sports and politics
haven’t been intertwined, when there’s the history of sports and politics
together through the 20th century—the 1936 Olympics in Berlin,
Muhammad Ali and Bill Russell. This isn’t anything new, and we shouldn’t be
surprised that athletes [use their] platform to talk about something more than
their performance on the court and the field….
Had Ashe been around today, he would be talking about
poverty, inadequate housing, the lack of communications between the police and
communities of color. People are focusing on the minutiae and not on the bigger
context. He would have added to the conversation. But I’m not sure he would
have been on Twitter.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb
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