Michelle J. Manno is a sociologist and the Assistant Provost for Diversity and Inclusion in the Office of Institutional Diversity and Inclusion at Northwestern University.
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Description
Anyone who seems ready to run a victory lap in celebration of girls and women having achieved equality in U.S. sport will find a powerful cautionary tale in Denied. Through a rare and very welcome ethnographic immersion with an elite college women's basketball team, Michelle J. Manno shows how women athletes-especially those who are Black, queer, and/or masculine-presenting-are constrained by strict policing of gender and sexuality. Manno paints a rich picture of women's sports as a microcosm of intersectional struggles for dignity, equality, and social justice. * Michael A. Messner, co-author of No Slam Dunk: Gender, Sport, and the Unevenness of Social Change * Manno's ... thoughtful analysis and compassionate storytelling point the reader to what it is that all of us seeking our place in sport strive for - to bring one's full self to the world of competition, to find our own authentic belonging there, and ultimately create a sense of 'home' for ourselves and others among teammates and competitors alike. * Lauren Holtkamp-Sterling, NBA Referee * Denied blends vivid story-telling with incisive theoretical analysis to highlight the persistent racism and sexism that limit women athletes of all races, sexualities, and gender identities. * Pat Griffin, author of Strong Women, Deep Closets: Lesbians and Homophobia in Sport * Denied convincingly argues women athletes, specifically Black/ queer/ and gender non-conforming athletes, are subject to racialized and gendered strategies of containment and control which ultimately impose constraints on who they can be and what they can achieve. * Cheryl Cooky, co-author of Serving Equality: Feminism, Media, and Women's Sports * As a former college athlete, Michelle J. Manno evocatively lays bare the challenges women athletes face both on and off the court as they balance the many competing demands placed on them. Their personal approach and deep empathy for this topic offer a necessary lens through which we can understand how women athletes' identities are policed along the lines of race, gender, and sexuality. * Chamique Holdsclaw, WNBA All-star and Olympic Gold Medalist *

