Stolen Bases - Jennifer Ring

Stolen Bases

Why American Girls Don't Play Baseball

(Autor)

Buch | Softcover
216 Seiten
2013
University of Illinois Press (Verlag)
978-0-252-07915-3 (ISBN)
18,65 inkl. MwSt
A revealing look at the history of women's exclusion from America's national pastime
This history of women in baseball demonstrates that, far from being strictly a men's sport, baseball has long been enjoyed and played by Americans of all genders, races, and classes since it became popular in the 1830s. The game itself was invented by English girls and boys, and when it immigrated to the United States, numerous prominent women's colleges formed intramural teams and fielded intensely spirited and powerful players. With the professionalization of the sport in the late nineteenth century, however, American boys and men shoved girls off the diamonds and sandlots. Girls have been fighting to get back in the game ever since. Jennifer Ring questions the forces that try to keep girls who want to play baseball away from the game. Focusing on a history that, unfortunately, repeats itself, Ring describes the circumstances that twice stole baseball from American girls: once in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, and again in the late twentieth century, after it was no longer legal to exclude girls who wanted to play. In the early twentieth century, Albert Goodwill Spalding--sporting goods magnate, baseball player, and promoter--declared baseball off limits for women and envisioned global baseball on a colonialist scale, using the American sport to teach men from non-white races and non-European cultures to become civilized and rational. And by the late twentieth century, baseball had become serious business for boys and men at all levels, with female players perceived as obstacles or detriments to rising male players' chances of success.

Stolen Bases also looks at the backgrounds of American softball, which was originally invented by men who wanted to keep playing baseball indoors during cold winter months but has become the consolation sport for most female players. Throughout her analysis, Ring searches for ways to rescue baseball from its arrogance and sense of exclusionary entitlement.

Jennifer Ring is a professor of political science and former director of women's studies at the University of Nevada, Reno. Her previous publications include The Political Consequences of Thinking: Gender and Judaism in the Work of Hannah Arendt, and articles on gender in American sports.

Acknowledgments    ix
Prologue: Entitlement and Its Absence    1
1. Introduction: A Quick and Dirty History of Baseball    15
2. The Girls' Game    31
3. A. G. Spalding and America's Needs    47
4. Enter Softball    59
5. How Baseball Became Manly and White    73
6. American Womanhood and Athletics    91
7. Cricket    102
8. Stolen Bases    116
9. Collegiate Women's Baseball    134
10. The Invisibility of Bias    151
Epilogue: What Does Equality Look Like?    169
Notes    183
Index    197
 

Zusatzinfo 13 black & white photographs
Verlagsort Baltimore
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 229 mm
Gewicht 286 g
Themenwelt Sachbuch/Ratgeber Sport Ballsport
Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Kulturgeschichte
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie
Weitere Fachgebiete Sportwissenschaft
ISBN-10 0-252-07915-9 / 0252079159
ISBN-13 978-0-252-07915-3 / 9780252079153
Zustand Neuware
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