The Cooperstown Symposium on Baseball and American Culture, 2003–2004
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About the Book
This is an anthology of 17 papers, eight presented at the Fifteenth Cooperstown Symposium on Baseball and American Culture in June 2003 and nine presented at the Sixteenth in June 2004. Selected from over 60 papers delivered at both symposia, the essays represent the finest scholarship from two conferences.
The essays are divided into five sections. “Gender: Feminism and Masculinity on and off the Diamond” examines the relationship between baseball and gender, and includes a discussion of the rituals of brawling and a unique autobiographical account from former major league player Dan Ardell. “African Americans and the Game” studies Reconstruction-era baseball, the African American press’s attitude toward the Negro Leagues, and the declining appeal of baseball for the African American community. “Other Minorities: Beyond Baseball’s Melting Pot” expands on the discussion of baseball and ethnicity. “Baseball Media: Literature, Journalism, and Audiovisual Reproduction” examines baseball from the perspective of the media and popular arts and considers baseball’s cultural stereotypes in film, drama, and literature. “The Business of Baseball” offers five essays on topics ranging from the foundation of the Yankees dynasty to the impact of market size on competition in the modern major leagues.
About the Author(s)
Bibliographic Details
Edited by William M. Simons. Series Editor Alvin L. Hall
Format: softcover (6 x 9)
Pages: 284
Bibliographic Info: tables, notes, index
Copyright Date: 2005
pISBN: 978-0-7864-2196-1
Imprint: McFarland
Series: Cooperstown Symposium Series
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments v
Preface 1
Introduction 5
PART I: GENDER: FEMINISM AND MASCULINITY ON AND OFF THE DIAMOND
A Cup of Coffee in the Show: My Seven Games in the Majors 17
Cuba Libre Versus Women’s Lib: A Comparison of the Feminine Side of Baseball in Cuba and in the United States 27
Defending Masculinity: Brawling and the Unwritten Rules of Major League Baseball 38
PART II: AFRICAN AMERICANS AND THE GAME
Bases Loaded: Race, Reconstruction, and Baseball in Washington, DC (1865–1876) 51
“Between Memory and History”: Black Sportswriters and the (Re)construction of Negro League Baseball 68
Down in the Dugout: Why Baseball Is No Longer the National Pastime for Blacks 80
PART III: OTHER MINORITIES: BEYOND BASEBALL’S MELTING POT
Who Is a Jewish Baseball Player? 95
Constructing the Cuban Pipeline: Papa Joe Cambria Brings the Cubans to Williamsport, Pennsylvania, (1944–1945) 107
The Chinese Wall and Murakami, Too: The Baseball Establishment and Post-World War II Perceptions of the Asian Other 123
PART IV: BASEBALL MEDIA: LITERATURE, JOURNALISM, AND AUDIOVISUAL REPRODUCTION
Imagining the Action: Audiovisual Baseball Game Reproductions in Richmond, Virginia (1895–1935) 141
Joe McCarthy and the Fourth Estate: A Window onto Baseball and Media Relations in the Mid-Twentieth Century 156
Playing Catch Inverted: August Wilson’s Fences and Other Departures from Baseball’s Cultural Stereotypes 182
PART V: THE BUSINESS OF BASEBALL
Yankees Profits and Promise: The Purchase of Babe Ruth and the Building of Yankee Stadium 197
Evolution of the Sunday Doubleheader and Its Role in Elevating the Popularity of Baseball 215
The Kansas City Royals’ Baseball Academy: Expanding the Science and Pedagogy of Baseball 227
The Cost of Competitiveness in Major League Baseball 242
The Elements of Major League Contraction 256
Index 267