Review:
A fascinating and well-told story, written in a smooth and engaging style. The subtle rhetorical analysis woven into the story allows the work to blur the boundaries of sport history and communication; it is an exemplar of how the two fields should be interconnected.--Sarah K. Fields "University of Colorado, Denver "
An intricate tapestry made of threads pulled from court records, case notes, oral histories, personal interviews, basketball schedules, and social movement rhetoric....Part social history/part rhetorical study/part personal journey, Invisible Seasons reveals one sports story we rarely hear though it is one that has been crucial in an ongoing battle to level the playing field.--Diana George "professor emerita, Virginia Tech "
The author skillfully uses excellent scholarship about the history, implementation, and consequences of Title IX, both generally and through the lens of a specific institution, as the landscape on which to effectively discuss the impact of rhetorical choices.--Linda Jean Carpenter "professor emerita, Brooklyn College, City University of New York "
In this richly detailed, deeply sourced, inspirational --and challenging--book, Kelly Belanger takes a clear-eyed look at the history of Title IX, from its passage in 1972 through its many ups and down to the present. Her keen rhetorical analysis shows what a pivotal role language played in crafting Title IX and then in (re)interpreting it. A member of the Michigan State women's team from 1982-86, Belanger brings her own experiences to bear in this history; and her page-turning account of the 1978-79 season at Michigan State, when the men's team (with Magic Johnson) took top honors, the women (who had an equally stellar record in this "invisible season"), were fighting for basic rights. These Title IX stories are ones we have not heard before, told with piercing insight and integrity.--Andrea Abernethy Lunsford "professor emerita, Stanford University "
Belanger paints an extensive, thorough picture of the 'microhistory' of the experiences at Michigan State which reflected relevantly across the country in the 1970s. Historical contexts of Invisible Seasons allows the reader to witness the fight for equity from a first-hand source.--Journal of Issues in Intercollegiate Athletics
A necessary book in the growing field of women's and gender sports history.--H-Net Reviews
Invisible Seasons provides a baseline to assess how much has changed and how much has remained the same since Title IX was passed in 1972.--International Journal of Sport Communication
Anyone interested in Title IX or in women's sports should add this book to their reading list.--New Books Network
About the Author:
Kelly Belanger is associate professor in the English Department at Valparaiso University. She is the coauthor of Second Shift: Teaching Writing to Working Adults.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.