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Get it between 2025-02-27 to 2025-03-06. Additional 3 business days for provincial shipping.
Review Won ― British Association of American Studies Book Prize Won ― Lord Aberdare Literary Prize Shortlisted ― British Sports Book Award “A treasure trove for boxing historians and aficionados. . . . At nearly five hundred densely packed pages . . . Boxing: A Cultural History would seem to include everything that has ever been written, depicted, or in any way recorded about boxing.” -- Joyce Carol Oates ― New York Review of Books "Boddy intelligently takes up—via art, literature, film, and the media—the many issues that have historically veined the sport: ’nationality, class, race, ethnicity, religion, politics, and different versions of masculinity,’ plus dialectics like ’brawn versus brains, boastfulness versus modesty, youth versus experience.’ Her reach is considerable, but so is her grasp. The result is a sweeping critical history and a perfect power-to-weight ratio." ― Atlantic "Splendid and surprising. . . . The illustrations in Boxing alone are worth the price of the book. . . . The author’s research is thorough, and her writing is sharp and crisp. ’Boxing’ easily pierces the aforementioned haze that surrounds the sport and gets to the crooked heart of the allure." -- Julia Keller ― Chicago Tribune "I’ve had a sneak preview of Kasia Boddy’s huge, lithe Boxing: A Cultural History, which is out in the spring from Reaktion. Boddy is the kind of writer whose intelligence can bring together and reveal the patterns and resonances between such unlikely contenders as Plato, Scorsese, Fielding, Dickens and Keith Haring. It’s a beautifully illustrated, expert, readable and startling expression of the dualities of all things. Boddy is the champion!" -- Ali Smith ― Guardian "If one author deserves real praise for stamina, it is Kasia Boddy. The research she has put into this book, combined with her awesome understanding of Western culture, is staggering. She can write with authority about everything from classical Rome to the Dada movement of the 1920s, from the work of George Bernard Shaw to Samuel Pepys’ diary. . . . Her book is a magnificent achievement." -- Leo McKinstry ― Sunday Telegraph “A penetrating, sparky, and powerfully intelligent work of artistic, sporting, and cultural history. . . . When you get to its final page you will find that you have not merely been entertained but enlightened, too. A literary knockout.” ― Times, Sports Books of the Year "Boddy’s book is a superb work of scholarship, spanning ancient Greece to Mike Tyson. Its reproduced lithographs and colour plates make the book, in its way, a handsome work of art in itself. . . . Boddy referees this heavyweight 15-rounder with elegance, aplomb, and rigor." -- Jonathan Rendall ― New Statesman "Compendious, and thoroughly fascinating. . . . An excellent, well-written and beautifully illustrated book." -- David Flusfeder ― Daily Telegraph "Future champs may well carry Boddy’s book in their sports bags along with their gloves, gum shields, and genital protectors." -- Reg Gadney ― Literary Review "Fascinating tome. . . . The breadth and rigour of her research is astonishing. A lecturer in English at the University College London, she is just as sure-footed on the intricacies of boxing as in their depiction in literature, painting, film, and television. . . . This is no dissertation dressed up in book form. Boddy seamlessly weaves together tales of fighting men with tales of the arts, placing them squarely within historical context. . . . She is a more reliable chronicler of boxing than the ringside hack." -- Gavin Evans ― Financial Times "[Boddy] provides much merriment along the way as she explores the ways professional fighters excite the imagination of writers, artists and intellectuals." ― Economist "The merit of Boddy’s meticulously researched and deeply intelligent examination of boxing through the ages is that it refuses to take the pop historian’s route of lazy simplification. The political and moral ambiguity of the fights that have pl