The book of James The power, politics, and passion of LeBron

Valerie Melissa Babb

Book - 2023

"No athlete is referenced as frequently in commentaries on Black politics as LeBron James. The NBA all-star, gold medal Olympian, four time NBA champion, and four-time finals MVP has been a pivotal figure in both the culture and politics of basketball. Despite his unmatched skill, success and popularity, James has never been fully free from the entrenched racism and anti-blackness in American life. His story, of both success and adversity, represents a larger story of how conflicts and tensions off the court always make it into the game and how athletes of color reckon with their ascent to fame while still living in a deeply racist society. In The Book of James, Valerie Babb examines his evolution from a basketball protégé to social ...activist. Every day it becomes more apparent that basketball stardom is just the first step in the evolution of one of the most celebrated presences in modern American culture. This book considers the peaks and pitfalls of his route to this prominence as well as well as what separates his outspokenness from previous athletes. The Book of James is timely in its examination of his impact on national race discourse. The result is a unique blend of memoir, biography and criticism that brings into focus the role of athletes in shaping and altering public discourse while simultaneously pushing the boundaries of their sport"--

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  • Apologia
  • Introduction
  • 1. "We Are All Witnesses"
  • 2. King James Way, Akron, Ohio, 44308
  • 3. "Mama, I Made It"
  • 4. "I Feel like I'm the Best Basketball Player That Ever Played the Game"
  • 5. "The First Time I Stepped on an NBA Court I Became a Businessman"
  • 6. "I'm LeBron, Baby"
  • 7. "I Know, Because I Was Those Kids"
  • Coda: "The Fourth Quarter Is My Favorite"
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This thought-provoking study from Babb (A History of the African American Novel), an African American studies professor at Emory University, examines how race has shaped public perceptions of Los Angeles Lakers star LeBron James. Babb contends that "white grievance" has made James the subject of racist attacks from the press and the public, who have caricatured him as a "Black jock out of his depth in political activism." She recounts how photos of James reading The Godfather were greeted with derogatory tweets accusing him of being illiterate, which Babb suggests was part of a larger tendency to view "Black athletes as physical but not cerebral." The author also traces how James found his political voice, noting that he declined to sit out games in protest of 12-year-old Tamir Rice's killing at the hands of Cleveland police in 2012, but grew more outspoken over time about his support for liberal policies and founded the More Than a Vote organization in 2020 to advance ballot access for Black Americans. The prose can be overwrought at times ("The symbolism of Obama and James became its own version of a pick and roll, as politician and player set defensive screens only to shift and go for the basket"), but Babb's astute analysis enlightens. This is a valuable contribution to the growing literature examining the intersection of professional sports and race in America. (Nov.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A study of basketball great LeBron James as an exemplar of unapologetic Blackness. Some NBA players, such as Patrick Ewing, have been worn to the bone by fan racism; others, such as Michael Jordan, have tried to place themselves above questions of race entirely, adopting a "non-Black Blackness." According to African American studies scholar Babb's account, James has positioned himself as a "race man," intent on self-expression while disproving racist tropes. It helps that he is phenomenally wealthy--though that fact does little to calm white racial resentments. "Rather than using celebrity to transcend Blackness, he uses it to give Blackness a place of prominence in American narrative-making," writes Babb, "leaving a cultural record of how much Blackness is loved, hated, misunderstood, and just plain cool in an America that has changed and yet not changed." However, no matter what good James does with his celebrity and wealth--e.g., funding competitive public schools, building homes for needy families--the fact remains that Black culture is valued more than Black lives in too many quarters. Babb capably traces narratives that have been employed for and against James, one the almost trite story of a poor young Black child being raised by a single mother and elevating himself out of poverty through sheer talent--which also serves to "reinforce the notion that sexual deviance, broken families, and failed communities are typical of Black life." In the case of basketball, Babb shows, poverty, broken homes, and all the rest are actually outliers in the NBA: James' story is atypical, bent to reinforce racist assumptions for whatever reason. James defies that description, and Babb emphasizes his accomplishments both on and off the court, closing with one of his mantras: "Celebrate Black excellence every single day." A provocative, illuminating blend of social criticism, cultural history, and athletics. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.