UW Professor Publishes Book on Community, Place and Dominoes in Denver
Published December 18, 2025
Steven Bialostok, an anthropologist and professor of elementary and early childhood
education in the University of Wyoming College of Education, has published a new book
that examines community, belonging and cultural continuity through the everyday practice
of playing dominoes.
“Playing to the End: Elder Black Men, Placemaking, and Dominoes in Denver,” published
by the University of Nebraska Press, draws on five years of ethnographic fieldwork
with a group of Black elders who have gathered, some since the 1960s, to play dominoes
five nights a week in a dedicated room inside a small city recreation center in Denver,
Colo.
Located in a historically Black neighborhood undergoing rapid gentrification, the
recreation center has long served as a social and cultural anchor. Through close attention
to the men’s nightly games -- marked by competition, storytelling, humor and spirited
verbal exchange -- Bialostok shows how these practices extend far beyond leisure.
“The room where they play functions as a site of collective placemaking, where Black
identity, memory and community are actively sustained and reaffirmed,” Bialostok says.
In the face of displacement and the steady erosion of cultural spaces, the dominoes
room emerges as a sanctuary of joy and continuity, asserting the men’s enduring presence,
significance and right to belong in the neighborhood.
More information about “Playing to the End” is available at www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/nebraska/9781496244963/playing-to-the-end/.

