'The unbearable lightness of being black': race, class, and Victorian Vancouver first lifeguard
http://localhistory.vpl.ca/link/cni48606
- Author
- Wong, John
- Date
- August 2011
- Geographic Location
- British Columbia - Vancouver - English Bay
- Material Type
- magazine article
- Abstract
- "In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, a black man, Joe Fortes, received much admiration from the city of Vancouver's white population. Fortes's life and career presents an interesting study of race and class not only in Vancouver but also in the larger North American society duri…
- Author
- Wong, John
- Role
- Author
- Date
- August 2011
- Geographic Location
- British Columbia - Vancouver - English Bay
- Material Type
- magazine article
- Source Title
- International Journal of the History of Sport
- Volume
- 28
- Issue
- 11
- Pages
- 1536-1555
- Abstract
- "In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, a black man, Joe Fortes, received much admiration from the city of Vancouver's white population. Fortes's life and career presents an interesting study of race and class not only in Vancouver but also in the larger North American society during this period... Fortes challenged the stereotypical assumptions of non-whites and achieved a degree of acceptance... This paper discusses Fortes' journey to respectability by adopting the values and beliefs learned from organised sport and physical recreation."