Black Gods of the Asphalt, Onaje X. O. Woodbine
Black Gods of the Asphalt, Onaje X. O. Woodbine
3 Rating(s)
List: $19.99 | Sale: $13.99
Club: $9.99

Black Gods of the Asphalt
Religion, Hip-Hop, and Street Basketball

Author: Onaje X. O. Woodbine

Narrator: Mirron Willis

Unabridged: 6 hr 16 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 04/05/2022


Synopsis

J-Rod moves like a small tank on the court, his face mean, staring down his opponents. "I play just like my father," he says. "Before my father died, he was a problem on the court. I'm a problem." Playing basketball for him fuses past and present, conjuring his father's memory into a force that opponents can feel in each bone-snapping drive to the basket.On the street, every ballplayer has a story. Onaje X. O. Woodbine, a former streetball player who became an all-star Ivy Leaguer, brings the sights and sounds, hopes and dreams of street basketball to life. He shows that big games have a trickster figure and a master of black talk whose commentary interprets the game for audiences. The beats of hip-hop and reggae make up the soundtrack, and the ballplayers are half-men, half-heroes, defying the ghetto's limitations with their flights to the basket.Basketball is popular among young black American men but not because, as many claim, they are "pushed by poverty" or "pulled" by white institutions to play it. Black men choose to participate in basketball because of the transcendent experience of the game. Through interviews with and observations of urban basketball players, Onaje X. O. Woodbine composes a rare portrait of a passionate, committed, and resilient group of athletes who use the court to mine what urban life cannot corrupt. If people turn to religion to reimagine their place in the world, then black streetball players are indeed the hierophants of the asphalt.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Eilonwy

This book is about exactly what the title promises. Onaje Woodbine grew up playing street ball in Boston, got a scholarship to Yale, and went on to study at the Boston University School of Theology. He then went back to the streets of Roxbury and Dorchester (Boston's black neighborhoods) to look at......more

Goodreads review by Jeri

This book is why I subscribe to Goodreads. I would have never known about this book if not for my buddy Michael. Decades ago, Michael and I worked together in a newsroom outside Boston. Good times, we had. But I haven't talked to him in years. All I've done it keep up with what he's reading on Goodr......more

Like most books that grow out of the author's dissertation, this one is a bit uneven in places, but in its best passages it is sheer poetry. It's no small task to combine Pierre Bourdieu, Henry Louis Gates, and David Hall's discussion of "lived religion" with something as visceral and immediate as a......more