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The Sport Journal - ISSN: 1543-9518

Book Review: Senda Berenson: The Unlikely Founder of Women’s Basketball

issn: 1543-9518


Senda Berenson: The Unlikely Founder of Women’s Basketball is author Ralph Melnick’s biographical account of Senda Berenson (1868-1954), considered by many to be the founder of women’s basketball. She pioneered gender-specific rules and emphasized skill development and team play.  She transformed the sport of women’s basketball from a physical education class for female underclassmen at Smith College to a nationwide, standardized-women’s game with rules formally approved by the American Association for the Advancement of Physical Education and published by Spaulding’s Athletic Library.     

Senda Berenson: The Unlikely Founder of Women’s Basketball is a “portrait” of Senda Berenson’s life. In sixteen chapters, the author describes Berenson’s modest upbringing as a sickly, young Jewish immigrant from Lithuania, her aspirations to be an artist, her revolutionary and practical applications towards women’s physical education, and her commitment to making exercise and games social and enjoyable. Berenson believed the new age of women dictated that women’s athletics could be used as catalysts for social change. She believed competition created moral bankruptcy. Berenson condemned personal glory, corporate profit, individualism, and the entrepreneurial spirit reflected in men’s athletics. In qualifying his portrait of Berenson, Ralph Melnick writes:

    [T]his book is neither a history of an advancing feminist wave nor a
    history of early women’s basketball;these stories have been told
    elsewhere, as has the history of women’s physical education. Rather,
     it is a stepback more than a century, even to those moments before
    the first ball was tossed at center court, in an attempt to create a
    portrait of the remarkable women who sent it upward.

In her words to her nephew shortly before her death, “Old age is creeping up on me…I suppose that at our age we resign ourselves to the fact that our energy gets weaker and weaker – although I cannot do it with resignation.” Millions of females throughout the country are reaping the benefits of Berenson’s foresight and fortitude. Her contributions to basketball have solidified her place in the Basketball Hall of Fame.

Senda Berenson: The Unlikely Founder of Women’s Basketball is a noteworthy account of a remarkable American woman who changed not only the face but the fundamental concept of the female athlete’s place in the world of sport and athletics. This book is a must read for those seeking an accurate historical account of the game of basketball. It also serves as an inspiration to female athletes and coaches everywhere, especially in a time when sports and athletics are still considered male-dominated institutions that continue to reflect a system of male ideals, values, and beliefs.

Author: Ralph Melnick
Published in 2007 by University of Massachusetts Press
(221 pages, ISBN: 1-55849-568-1)