Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 346
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-4422-2994-5 • Hardback • June 2014 • $58.00 • (£45.00)
978-0-8108-9526-3 • Paperback • October 2017 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-4422-2995-2 • eBook • June 2014 • $36.00 • (£30.00)
Malissa Smith is an amateur boxer and maintains a popular blog about the sport—Girlboxing. She writes frequently on the topic of women’s boxing and has appeared as a guest on the radio show Courts & Sports to discuss women’s boxing history and women’s boxing in the Olympics. Smith is a board member of the International Women’s Boxing Hall of Fame (IWBHF).
AcknowledgementsIntroductionChapter 1: She-Devils and Amazonian Tigresses: Women Enter the Boxing RingChapter 2: Victorian Ladies BoxingChapter 3: Boxing, Women, and the Mores of ChangeChapter 4: Encountering the Modern: Flappers, Mae West, and the War YearsChapter 5: Boxing in the Age of the “Mighty Atom”Chapter 6: Burning Bras, Taking on the “Sheriff,” and Winning the Right to Fight Chapter 7: A Ring of Their Own Chapter 8: These Ladies Love the Ring Chapter 9: Christy Martin and the Pinking of the Velvet RopesChapter 10: Women’s Boxing and the Fame GameChapter 11: The AmateursConclusion: The State of Things: 1722-2012 and BeyondBibliographyIndexAbout the Author
Blogger (Girlboxing) and amateur boxer Smith traces the sport as far back as early 18th-century England, unearthing sources documenting matches involving women with such intimidating nicknames as 'Bruising Peg.' Serious women boxers have long had to counter the taint of risqueness in their sport; as one might expect, the growth of women’s boxing has not been a steady climb but has waxed and waned as public attitudes have changed. A surge in popularity in the 1990s led to the sport’s inclusion in the 2012 Summer Olympics. Smith enlivens her scholarly treatment with colorful anecdotes (the death threats once sent to women boxers), strange facts (U.S. jurisdictions forced fighters to wear aluminum bras), and lots of examples of press coverage illuminating societal attitudes toward female fisticuffs. Some 20 well-chosen photographs spotlight the sport’s past and present. The thorough bibliography should satisfy the most curious student. VERDICT A comprehensive, entertaining work for readers interested in women’s history or sports history.
— Library Journal
While today’s female boxers benefit from organized training, professional management, media exposure, and societal acceptance, history shows that it has not been an easy climb. Smith meticulously documents the journey of female pugilists from their beginnings in London in the early eighteenth century to their first inclusion in the Olympics in 2012. Casual fans may recognize such contemporaries as Christi Morgan and Laila Ali, but the fighters who really light up this account are such now-forgotten figures as Texas Mamie, Barbara ('The Mighty Atom of the Ring') Buttrick, and Cathy 'Cat' Davis. Smith weaves together excerpts from firsthand accounts of memorable bouts with social history to provide a complete picture of the struggles and sacrifices these women and many others, such as female promoters and managers, faced in order to legitimize the sport they loved. This is a thoughtful and inclusive account of the evolution of women’s boxing and will make a strong addition to most sports collections.
— Booklist
[W]hen it comes to the Sweeter Science, this 346-page tome is the Bible, one that was sorely needed when it comes to this often neglected area of boxing. . . .The detail Smith provides is impressive. . . .It's fascinating stuff, meticulously researched, and provides a rich history – in and out of the ring – not just for fans but for the ladies who ply their trade in the sport and now have a book they can present to family and friends and say, 'This is who I am and where I come from.'
— The Ring
[A History of Women's Boxing] will change the way you think about women’s boxing. . . .The book is the colorful account of a subculture. . . .fans not only got a taste of what’s possible, but what’s always been here.
— The Record
This book proves that hitting like a girl is no insult — it's a time-honored position.
— Brooklyn Heights Courier
This book proves that hitting like a girl is no insult — it is a time-honored tradition. (Previous Edition Praise)
— Brooklyn Paper
A History of Women's Boxing is a "history first"—a meticulously researched, seriously written yet highly entertaining book about the sport. Author Malissa Smith mined historical databases, newspaper archives, and individual memories to portray a compelling in-depth look at the women of the ring from the early 1700's to the challenges facing female fighters today. Her description of my first mismatched bout in the 1970s could not have been expressed any better and brought back the feelings I had as I stepped out of the ring. The book is no doubt an instant classic in boxing lore and belongs on everyone's shelves!
— Sue TL Fox, #1-ranked Super Welterweight in 1979, honored as one of Ring Magazine’s Top-Ten Most Influential Female Boxers of All Time
At last, a comprehensive history of female participation in boxing. These pioneers, past and present, owe Malissa Smith an immense debt of gratitude for bringing them out of the shadows and giving them the exposure they have long deserved for their character, determination, and undeniable strength.
— Mischa Merz, author of The Sweetest Thing and owner of Mischa’s Boxing Central
Women have been involved in all aspects of boxing for several hundred years. Their contribution to the sport has been overlooked. Malissa Smith has written an exciting book that brings to light how much women have given to this sport. Once you get started reading, you will not put it down.
— Bruce Silverglade, owner of boxing’s world-famous Gleason’s Gym
In her classic meditation On Boxing, Joyce Carol Oates wrote, 'Boxing is for men, and it is about men. A celebration of the lost religion of masculinity all the more trenchant for being lost.' Smith (herself an amateur boxer) challenges that idea in this study of the long, sometimes all but invisible, history of women in the ring. As early as 1722, when Elizabeth Wilkinson challenged Hannah Hayfield to meet her 'on the Stage' and battle for three guineas, women have expressed a desire to fight for money, honor, championships, or physical satisfaction. As much as anything, Smith claims, women entered the ring as an expression of their desire and right to shape their identities. Since Wilkinson’s challenge, women, for the most part, have been denied full expression of that desire; their participation in boxing has had something of a sideshow quality. But in recent decades, women have won that right and fought with distinction (as the appearance of professional boxer Christy Martin on the cover of Sports Illustrated and Claressa Shields’s gold medal in the middleweight division in the 2012 Olympics demonstrate). . . .Summing Up: Recommended. All readers.
— Choice Reviews