Creating the National Pastime
eBook - ePub

Creating the National Pastime

Baseball Transforms Itself, 1903-1953

  1. 384 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Creating the National Pastime

Baseball Transforms Itself, 1903-1953

About this book

At a time when many baseball fans wish for the game to return to a purer past, G. Edward White shows how seemingly irrational business decisions, inspired in part by the self-interest of the owners but also by their nostalgia for the game, transformed baseball into the national pastime. Not simply a professional sport, baseball has been treated as a focus of childhood rituals and an emblem of American individuality and fair play throughout much of the twentieth century. It started out, however, as a marginal urban sport associated with drinking and gambling. White describes its progression to an almost mythic status as an idyllic game, popular among people of all ages and classes. He then recounts the owner's efforts, often supported by the legal system, to preserve this image.


Baseball grew up in the midst of urban industrialization during the Progressive Era, and the emerging steel and concrete baseball parks encapsulated feelings of neighborliness and associations with the rural leisure of bygone times. According to White, these nostalgic themes, together with personal financial concerns, guided owners toward practices that in retrospect appear unfair to players and detrimental to the progress of the game. Reserve clauses, blacklisting, and limiting franchise territories, for example, were meant to keep a consistent roster of players on a team, build fan loyalty, and maintain the game's local flavor. These practices also violated anti-trust laws and significantly restricted the economic power of the players. Owners vigorously fought against innovations, ranging from the night games and radio broadcasts to the inclusion of African-American players. Nonetheless, the image of baseball as a spirited civic endeavor persisted, even in the face of outright corruption, as witnessed in the courts' leniency toward the participants in the Black Sox scandal of 1919.


White's story of baseball is intertwined with changes in technology and business in America and with changing attitudes toward race and ethnicity. The time is fast approaching, he concludes, when we must consider whether baseball is still regarded as the national pastime and whether protecting its image is worth the effort.

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Information

Year
2014
eBook ISBN
9781400851362
Print ISBN
9780691058856
9780691034881

Table of contents

  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Dedication Page
  5. Contents
  6. List of Illustrations
  7. Preface
  8. Introduction
  9. Chapter One: The Ballparks
  10. Chapter Two: The Enterprise, 1903–1923
  11. Chapter Three: The Rise of the Commissioner: Gambling, the Black Sox, and the Creation of Baseball Heroes
  12. Chapter Four: The Negro Leagues
  13. Chapter Five: The Coming of Night Baseball
  14. Chapter Six: Baseball Journalists
  15. Chapter Seven: Baseball on the Radio
  16. Chapter Eight: Ethnicity and Baseball: Hank Greenberg and Joe DiMaggio
  17. Chapter Nine: The Enterprise, 1923–1953
  18. Chapter Ten: The Decline of the National Pastime
  19. Notes
  20. Index