Won
British Association of American Studies Book Prize
Won
Lord Aberdare Literary Prize
Shortlisted
British Sports Book Award
“A treasure trove for boxing historians and aficionados. . . . At nearly five hundred densely packed pages . . . Boxing: A Cultural History would seem to include everything that has ever been written, depicted, or in any way recorded about boxing.”
Joyce Carol Oates | New York Review of Books
"Boddy intelligently takes up—via art, literature, film, and the media—the many issues that have historically veined the sport: ’nationality, class, race, ethnicity, religion, politics, and different versions of masculinity,’ plus dialectics like ’brawn versus brains, boastfulness versus modesty, youth versus experience.’ Her reach is considerable, but so is her grasp. The result is a sweeping critical history and a perfect power-to-weight ratio."
Atlantic
"Splendid and surprising. . . . The illustrations in Boxing alone are worth the price of the book. . . . The author’s research is thorough, and her writing is sharp and crisp. ’Boxing’ easily pierces the aforementioned haze that surrounds the sport and gets to the crooked heart of the allure."
Julia Keller | Chicago Tribune
"I’ve had a sneak preview of Kasia Boddy’s huge, lithe Boxing: A Cultural History, which is out in the spring from Reaktion. Boddy is the kind of writer whose intelligence can bring together and reveal the patterns and resonances between such unlikely contenders as Plato, Scorsese, Fielding, Dickens and Keith Haring. It’s a beautifully illustrated, expert, readable and startling expression of the dualities of all things. Boddy is the champion!"
Ali Smith | Guardian
"If one author deserves real praise for stamina, it is Kasia Boddy. The research she has put into this book, combined with her awesome understanding of Western culture, is staggering. She can write with authority about everything from classical Rome to the Dada movement of the 1920s, from the work of George Bernard Shaw to Samuel Pepys’ diary. . . . Her book is a magnificent achievement."
Leo McKinstry | Sunday Telegraph
“A penetrating, sparky, and powerfully intelligent work of artistic, sporting, and cultural history. . . . When you get to its final page you will find that you have not merely been entertained but enlightened, too. A literary knockout.”
Times, Sports Books of the Year
"Boddy’s book is a superb work of scholarship, spanning ancient Greece to Mike Tyson. Its reproduced lithographs and colour plates make the book, in its way, a handsome work of art in itself. . . . Boddy referees this heavyweight 15-rounder with elegance, aplomb, and rigor."
Jonathan Rendall | New Statesman
"Compendious, and thoroughly fascinating. . . . An excellent, well-written and beautifully illustrated book."
David Flusfeder | Daily Telegraph
"Future champs may well carry Boddy’s book in their sports bags along with their gloves, gum shields, and genital protectors."
Reg Gadney | Literary Review
"Fascinating tome. . . . The breadth and rigour of her research is astonishing. A lecturer in English at the University College London, she is just as sure-footed on the intricacies of boxing as in their depiction in literature, painting, film, and television. . . . This is no dissertation dressed up in book form. Boddy seamlessly weaves together tales of fighting men with tales of the arts, placing them squarely within historical context. . . . She is a more reliable chronicler of boxing than the ringside hack."
Gavin Evans | Financial Times
"[Boddy] provides much merriment along the way as she explores the ways professional fighters excite the imagination of writers, artists and intellectuals."
Economist
"The merit of Boddy’s meticulously researched and deeply intelligent examination of boxing through the ages is that it refuses to take the pop historian’s route of lazy simplification. The political and moral ambiguity of the fights that have played such a seminal role in shaping human consciousness are chronicled in all their rich and equivocal detail. . . . Her volume is one of the most intelligent sporting books of recent times."
Matthew Syed | Times
"Almost everyone who matters in Western cultural history in the past century enters Boddy’s ring. . . . such is the overall quality of the job here that she can be forgiven anything."
Peter Temple | Age
"Boddy’s vivid and highly entertaining book traces the manner in which pugilism has been represented in Western culture from Homer’s Iliad of the eighth century BC to the present. . . . A lavishly illustrated study of a contentious yet compelling sport."
John Strachan | History Today
"For what seems like forever, writers have tried to make sense of man’s attraction to the sport of pugilism. Precious few have succeeded in explaining the relationship, while many have failed. . . . Boddy is one of those who have successfully captured the essence of boxing’s grip on us, and she has done so with flying colors. . . . A tour de force."
The Ring
"Boddy explains why so many great writers and artists have been fascinated by the dark lure of boxing. With a cast of characters from Daniel Mendoza, DW Griffith, and James Joyce to Joe Louis, Bob Dylan, Muhammad Ali, and Public Enemy she avoids pontification to mine a riveting history."
Donald McRae | Guardian, Sports Books of the Year
"A triumph of research in an unexpected field. . . . Impressively comprehensive, Boddy’s study of the culture inspired by knuckle-ups is a knock out."
Independent
"A serious yet entertaining study, packed with obscure facts and accompanied by a huge selection of marvelous photos and illustrations."
Marcel Berlins | Guardian
"Superbly researched and beautifully illustrated, with sources ranging from Greek epic to American hip hop."
Time Out
"An exceptionally rich and diverting read, which provides fascinating analyses of boxing’s importance to, among others, Norman Mailer and Philip Roth, Bob Dylan and Public Enemy’s Chuck D."
Martin Pengelly | Guardian
"Boxing has punched its way through Western history since 3000 BC. But Boddy’s fascinating study focuses mainly on its literary and cultural knuckleprint."
Times
"[An] ambitious and remarkably accomplished survey. . . . While she expertly chronicles the sport’s history, her focus is on its cultural imprint writing about fights and fighters by authors including Byron, Hazlitt, Conan Doyle, Shaw, Colette, Hemingway, Brecht, and Mailer is analyzed especially perceptively, as you’d expect of an English lecturer, but painting, cinema, photography, and pop music are amply covered, too."
John Dugdale | Guardian
"This is a book for those who want to really understand boxing. Traveling to the contradictory heart of an extraordinary and controversial sport, Boddy reminds us of its almost endless history, how it has influenced popular culture and, most importantly, the enduring valor of those brave enough to enter the ring."
Times Higher Education
"Very readable with a wealth of facts that really grab the interest. . . . Erudite, but fascinating."
Boxing News
"A must for any fight fan’s collection."
Thomas Myler | Irish Independent
"Why does boxing matter so much to so many? This is what Boddy sets out to answer in this exhaustive study of why so many artists and writers have been seduced by pugilism. Packed with anecdotes, heavy on research, this is five hundred pages of pure punching power."
Irish Times
"‘In this unique book Boddy manages to comprehensively retell the history of the sweet science through a rich interweave of the plethora of cultural commentaries and artifacts that have been inspired by this, humankind’s most rudimentary and essential sport. . . . A powerful book that should appeal to many audiences. . . . A must-read for those interested in the links between empirical experience and cultural interpretation and representation. . . . For almost 500 pages of beautifully written prose and wonderful pictures, it is excellent value for money."
Sport in History
"An extraordinarily sumptuous and deeply textured book on the changing cultural representation of boxing over time and space. . . . Boddy has succeeded in writing a cultural history of such depth and quality that it is likely to remain the standard work for decades to come. . . . Boxing: A Cultural History is that rare case of a work of considerable erudition and scholarship which is so well written and constructed that it will appeal to the popular reader and the boxing fan as much as to the graduate student and academic. It is, in short, a remarkable achievement and the standard against which future academic books on the noble art will be judged."
International Journal of the History of Sport
"Boddy takes the reader on a totally unexpected and illuminating mining expedition into the unexplored depths of the enduring, essential, and existential relationship between boxing and human history from the classical period to the present. Although what Boddy has found and how she discovered it are impressive enough, even more so is how the author handles her raw material and refines it with her keen powers of textual analysis."
Jeffrey Sammons | Cultural Sociology
"In this ambitious book, Boddy provides a fascinating account of the ways in which boxing has been represented in literature and the visual arts from ancient Greece to the present. . . . No other work attempts such an exhaustive investigation of boxing’s cultural history in the Western world."
Choice
"In Boxing: A Cultural History, Boddy . . . gives us an encyclopedic survey of the ring in art and literature. This is a big, beautiful book. Reaktion printed it on high-quality, oversized paper to accommodate one hundred fifty illustrations, and these images are an integral part of the book’s purpose."
Elliot Gorn | American Journal of Play
"An absorbing and important read. Every page stuns, reveals, intrigues and it is handsomely illustrated with dozens of beautifully-reproduced drawings and photographs. Indeed, this splendid volume has the feel of one of those fulsome PBS series companion books, a feeling of completeness, of stunning insight, the kind of reading experience that will alter your perception of a sport you only think you know."
Aethlon
"This book is not only a great source of all kinds of information on boxing and culture, especially on the relationship between boxing and artists, it is at the same time an analytical account of these relationships from the seventeenth century to the present day, which, perhaps, makes it the kind of book Stendhal spoke about when he said that there are books which everybody reads and uses, but rarely praises as they should be praised."
Physical Culture and Sports Studies and Research
"Boddy pursues a lively, wide-ranging critical survey of boxing in literature, film, and other media, a compendious engagement with a fantastically rich tradition. She attends to both the aesthetic and the signifying potential of boxing, which has attracted artists for three millennia not only because it inspires and challenges their creative impulses but because, as Boddy amply demonstrates, the ring has proven to be a lastingly useful venue for staging all manner of ideas about class, violence, history, gender, work, leisure, ideology, politics, race, and nation, among other topics."
Carlo Rotella, author of "Cut Time: An Education at the Fights" and "Good with Their Hands"
"If you trace man’s first footsteps on the planet you’d see much about him has changed - and that some has not - such as his ability and even his need to fight. But not for survival alone—but for a reason for existence, an identity to pass on, to aspire towards. Boddy’s Boxing: A Cultural History explores this journey and connects dots that explain why, how long, and who we’ve been fighting."
Teddy Atlas
"The first thing that must be admired is the incredible richness of its sources. Boddy moves from classical Greece to contemporary fine art and mass culture and provides a wonderful synthesis of the writing and visual imaging of boxing. She writes with great clarity and draws this huge variety of material together with great ease. The research is very impressive. The text offers both an historical survey of the culture of boxing and the points of contact and connection across different periods. This is a very accomplished piece of research and writing."
Lynda Nead, University of London Birkbeck