Beast. Monster. Savage. Psycho. The glowering menace of Mike Tyson has
spooked us for almost two decades. And still we remain fascinated. Why?
Ellis Cashmore's answer is disturbing: white society has created Tyson
as vengeance for the loss of privilege produced by civil rights.
Cashmore's eviscerating analysis of Tyson's life and the culture in
which he grew up, rose to prominence and descended into disgrace
provokes the reader into re-thinking the role of one of the most
controversial and infamous figures of recent history. Told as an
odyssey-style homeward journey to Tyson's multi-pathological origins in
the racially-explosive ghettos of the 1960s, Tyson's story is part
biography, part tragedy and part exposition. His associations with
people like Al Sharpton, Don King and Tupac Shakur shaped his life; and
events, such as the O J Simpson trial and the Rodney King riots, formed
a turbulent background for the Tyson psychodrama.
Over the course of an epic boxing career, Tyson was transformed from the
most celebrated athlete on earth to a primal, malevolent hate-figure.
Yet, even after being condemned as a brute, Tyson retained a power - a
power to captivate. Cashmore reveals that the sources of that power lie
as much in us as in Tyson himself.