Sacks, M. (2018). Joe Louis : sports and race in twentieth-century America. New York: Routledge.
Sacks, M. (2015). Speaking Through Silence? Whites’ Efforts to Make Meaning of Joe Louis. In D. Scott (Ed.), Cultures of Boxing (pp. 47-59). Bern: Peter Lang.
Sacks, M. (2013). Behind the Brown Mask: Joe Louis’ Face and the Construction of Racial Mythologies. In K. Rieser-Wohlfarter, M. Fuchs & M. Phillips (Eds.), ConFiguring America: Iconic Figures, Visuality, and the American Identity (pp. 47-64). Bristol, UK: Intellect.
Sacks, M. S. (May 26, 2010). Rand Paul and the danger of careless rhetoric about civil rights. Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved from http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/Opinion/2010/0526/Rand-Paul-and-the-danger-of-careless-rhetoric-about-civil-rights
Sacks, M. S. (2006). Before Harlem : the Black experience in New York City before World War I. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
Sacks, M. S. (2005). “To Show Who Was in Charge” Police Repression of New York City’s Black Population at the Turn of the Twentieth Century. Journal of Urban History, 31(6), 799-819.
Sacks, M. (2005). Recreating Black New York at Century’s End. In I. Berlin & L. Harris (Eds.), Slavery in New York (pp. 325-349). New York: The New Press.
Sacks, M. (2004). ’To Be a Man and Not a Lackey:’ Black Men, Work, and the Construction of Manhood in Gilded Age New York City. American Studies, 45(1), 39-63.