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New book on Bobbie Rosenfeld
Bobbie Rosenfeld: The Olympian Who Could Do Everything.
Anne Dublin.
Toronto, ON: Second Story Press, 2004.
148 pp., pbk., $14.95.
ISBN 1-896764-82-7
ISBN #9781896764825
Subject Headings:
Rosenfeld, Bobbie, 1904-1969-Juvenile literature.
Women Athletes-Canada-Biography-Juvenile literature.
Women Sportswriters-Canada-Biography-Juvenile literature.
Grades 7 and up / Ages 12 and up.
Review by J. Lynn Fraser.
**** /4
If Bobbie Rosenfeld hadn't existed, she would have to be invented.
Anne Dublin is doing a service to young readers, and older
ones as well, by informing them about Rosenfeld's athletic
achievements and her innate sense of fair play and team spirit.
Dublin outlines not only Rosenfeld's achievements in the
arena of track and field that include being among the first
group of female athletes to compete at the Olympics where
she medaled, but also her brief but groundbreaking career
as an insurance salesperson and her twenty years as a sports
writer. Her sense of fair play existed before her fame and
continued throughout her life.
One of the many incidences of team spirit Rosenfeld displayed
was during an Olympic running race where she ran along side
a colleague, sacrificing her own chance at winning, while
encouraging her Canadian teammate to stay in the race and
finish (pp. 71-72).
Dublin also ensures that her readers are well aware of the
social, economic and greater world events that were taking
place while Rosenfeld forged her career. These events are
described within their own chapters and within shaded boxes
within each chapter. Older readers will enjoy the reminder
of earlier times in 1920's Toronto and onward not that they
were uncomplicated or without conflict but the text's photographs
bring alive those times. Dublin adds to Rosenfeld's story
by giving a context to the times in which she lived. In Ontario,
for example, it was illegal for Blacks and Jews to own property
in certain areas. This situation did not change until 1950.
A timeline is supplied by the author at the back of the book
so that Rosenfeld's life and career can be tracked. The bibliography
and sources for additional reading on sports and history are
also helpful.
The author's writing style is relaxed and has the feel of
one friend relating a story to another friend. The font of
the text is large and easily read. Black and white photos
help to break up the text and add to the narrative as do samples
of newspaper articles from the era. Rosenfeld battled prejudice
against women as sports participants and as serious competing
athletes. As Dublin noted, women athletes were seen as unfeminine
and too weak to participate in sports. Women in sports were
seen as going against "the laws of nature" . Educators,
doctors, and lawmakers mostly male still believed that women
were fragile, if not inferior." Rosenfeld's records,
along with those of her colleagues, pointed out the fallacy
in that belief. Dublin quotes an article Rosenfeld wrote for
Chatelaine magazine:
The modern girl is a better worker and a happier woman by
reason of the healthy pleasure she takes in tennis, hockey,
lacrosse, swimming, running, jumping and other sports. (p.73)
Dublin also points out that Rosenfeld "discussed the
legal and political implications within women's sports and
how these affected all women." Rosenfeld also wrote about
"women in society and women's contribution to the war
effort" as well as about "the greed and corruption
that had regrettably become a part of professional sports."
These discussions and issues will, without doubt, strike an
older reader as painfully familiar.
Bobbie Rosenfeld: The Olympian Who Could Do Everything is
a very enjoyable read about a woman whose humour, charm, political
savvy and inspiring athleticism should be known to students
of all ages.
Highly Recommended.
J. Lynn Fraser, a freelance writer whose articles appear
in international magazines and newspapers, resides in Toronto,
ON.
To comment on this title or this review, send mail to cm@umanitoba.ca.
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