The extraordinary collection of photographs and rich personal stories that make up Game Face documents the tremendous impact that sports has on the daily lives of millions of girls and women. On playing fields and street corners, in backyards and gyms, the people in this arresting array of pictures are unselfconsciously exploring the physical and emotional pleasures of competition and play. Each image offers an affirming and satisfying answer to the question at the heart of Game Face : What do girls and women look like, freed from traditional feminine constraints, using their bodies in joyful and empowering ways?
When Title IX was passed in 1972, only one out of twenty-seven school-age girls played sports. Now one in three does. Yet their expanding involvement in sports is still largely overlooked by the media, and as a consequence, millions of young female athletes crave not only role models but an authentic and appealing reflection of their own athleticism. As a young sports journalist, Jane Gottesman was all too aware of this imbalance, and saw the need for a book that honors both our top female athletes and the everyday girls and women whose self-image is strengthened through athletic participation. With the goal of showing America what women's sports looks like, she searched through the work of our country's best photographers, from the newest photojournalists to artists such as Annie Leibovitz and Ansel Adams. The result is Game Face , a unique and inspiring selection of color and black-and-white photographs, a text with first-person accounts by athletes, and an illustrated time line of women's athletic milestones.
Published simultaneously with the opening of an important exhibition at the Smithsonian Institution that will tour for five years, Game Face has been endorsed by the Girl Scouts of the USA, who've developed a Game Face patch, the NCAA, and the YWCA of the USA. An inspiring gift for an athlete of any age, this powerful, timely book takes one of art's most studied subjects the female body and celebrates it in a brand-new way.
The author showed real women in the heat of sport with the same determination and drive as their male counterparts; and that they were just as serious about their sport as men. The collection declares we can be our own role models and success is defined on our own terms. The look on their faces reflects inner strength and fight. Upon hearing, “You can’t do it,” those ladies just balled up their fists, resolving, “I’ll show you!” But they didn’t do it alone; several athletes said they had friends, brothers, and fathers who played with them or created opportunities for them to pursue sport.
This is a pictorial collection with few essays. My only criticisms: athletes are rarely identified in the pictures and pictures are often unrelated to the essays on the same page.
This book inspires me to think about my own goals and expectations. How bad do I want it? What am I willing to do to get it? It might inspire a girl to become active, but more likely she must already have that fire and curiosity inside her to think, “That looks fun! I wonder if I can do that.”
My teen and I are both athletes and appreciated Game Face. She also identified with the athlete who talked about pushing to her limits and then discovering she could go further.
Favorite story: Andra Douglas’ (“What Can Be the Harm?”, Douglas, 36) about her father standing up to his buddies for her.
2nd Favorite story: 13-year-old Renee Cox used the power of the press to get on the high school boys’ basketball team.
Favorite quote: “I am going to smash through this girl to win this head ball.” – Michelle Akers, p. 104
Favorite pictures: woman pole-vaulting in a long dress (p. 106) and a scared little girl trying to hold on to her sheep mount in a rodeo (p. 117). Fear is part of bravery and guts too.
Fantastic compilation of pictures throughout the years and thoughtful essays. My favorite part is the timeline at the end. I was both in awe of the women and shocked by the sexism. Would love to see a companion/Game Face 2, to cover the massive growth in women's sports since this booked was published.