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Men’s Boxing ‘An unbeatable vector of resistance to racism’

JOHN WIGHT unravels the fascinating connection between boxing hero Joe Louis and writer Richard Wright, who chronicled his fight against America’s racist soul - as well as his opponents in the ring

FEW writers understood America’s racist soul as keenly as Richard Wright, and few used their pen as mercilessly as he did as a weapon to excoriate and expose it. In black heavyweight champion and ring legend, Joe Louis, Wright found the perfect symbol of black resistance to the conceits of a dominant culture wallowing in the abyss of white supremacy and in and through him perfect fodder for his own detestation of it. Wright’s treatment of Louis’s exploits in the ring and importance outside it combined to forge an unbeatable vector of resistance to that culture.

Wright was born in 1904, the son of a sharecropper in Mississippi in the Deep South. Slavery had only ended four decades earlier, and white supremacy had by then physically reasserted itself in the shape of the Ku Klux Klan and socially under the rubric of Jim Crow, a system of apartheid that was to hold sway across the South all the way up into to the 1960s.

By the time Wright relocated to the south side of Chicago in 1927, he was ready to make his mark as a writer and radical black voice at a time when metropolises such as Chicago, New York, Boston, Detroit and San Francisco were alive with left-wing and radical ideas, providing hope for social and political transformation at a time when Soviet communism still stood as a beacon to the poor and the marginalised and oppressed across the world.

Wright joined the Communist Party in 1933, having spent the previous year attending meetings of the then Marxist literary group, the John Reed Club. He soon began writing cultural and literary pieces for the popular communist New Masses magazine, honing and developing a voice that would explode into public consciousness with the publication of his classic novel, Native Son, in 1940. The novel’s anti-hero, Bigger Thomas, is unapologetically and defiantly black: “The thing to do was to act just like others acted, live like they lived, and while they were not looking, do what you wanted.”

Five years before Native Son exploded onto the scene, Joe Louis had already done so with his victory over Italian giant, Primo Carnera, in front of a packed crowd at the Yankee Stadium in New York. That same year the Bronze Bomber also destroyed Max Baer. Even at this early stage in his career, two years before becoming world champion, Louis was already a cultural icon, revered in every black ghetto, allowing the residents the opportunity to revel in vicarious glory as he pummelled his predominately white opponents in the way white America pummelled them in their daily lives.

Wright latched onto Louis as the symbol of a new black man — strong, brave, indomitable — and embraced him as a man and a fighter whose importance transcended the ring. Witnessing the scenes of wild celebration in South Side Chicago that met Louis’s victory over Baer, Wright penned a piece titled ‘Joe Louis Uncovers Dynamite’ in which he writes: “‘LOUIS! LOUIS! LOUIS!’” they yelled and threw their hats away. They snatched newspapers from the stands of astonished Greeks and tore them up, flinging the bits into the air. They wagged their heads. Lawd, they’d never heard or seen anything like it before.”

Wright here beautifully captures Louis’s social and racial importance, making the point that he was more than a fighter — he was a black prince, venting revenge for the lifetime of racial slights suffered and endured by black America at the hands of white America. Black America needed its hero and in Joe Louis it found one.

Regardless, the Joe Louis that stepped into the ring at a sold out Yankee Stadium on 22 June 1938 to rematch Hitler’s champion, Max Schmeling, did so as liberal not just black America’s champion, anointed as such by a white liberal establishment swimming in hypocrisy. Wright covered the fight for the Daily Worker and the New Masses, but for him class took second place to race when it came to the stakes involved. 

Richard Wright: “Out beyond the walls of the stadium were 12 million Negroes to whom the black puppet [Louis] symbolised the living refutation of the hatred spewed forth daily over radios, in newspapers, in movies, and in books about their lives. Day by day, since their alleged emancipation, they have watched a picture of themselves being painted as lazy, stupid, and diseased.”

In the same piece, “High Tide in Harlem: Joe Louis as a Symbol of Freedom,” Wright describes the scenes at Louis’s training camp in the lead up to the fight: “Visits to Joe Louis’s training camp revealed throngs of Negroes standing around in a state of deep awe, waiting for just one glimpse of their champion. They were good, simple-hearted people, longing deeply for something of their own to be loyal to.”

High Tide in Harlem is a tour de force, less sportswriting and more social and cultural commentary that moves beyond the “what” of Joe Louis to arrive at the “why.”

Louis had predicted that his revenge over the German, who defeated him when they met the first time in 1936, would take two rounds. It only took him one as he came out at the bell and launched an assault of such studied ferocity, Schmeling had no chance. 

Describing the aftermath, here’s Wright again: “Men, women, and children gathered in thick knots and did the Big Apple, the Lindy Hop, the Truck — Harlem’s gesture of defiance to the high cost of food, high rent, and misery. These ghetto-dwellers, under the stress of the joy of one of their own kind having wiped the stain of defeat and having thrown the lie of ‘inferiority’ into the teeth of the fascist, threw off restraint and fear.”

Richard Wright was the chronicler of Joe Louis black America needed and liberal America had no equal to, drawing on his own experience of Jim Crow to raise Louis up to the status of folkhero.

In no other sport.

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