Just when you thought everything had been written about baseball, along comes this remarkably fresh look at "the old ball game," together with a provocative series of inquiries that redirect our thinking about the game. Is baseball really like life? How does it reflect a more traditional moral universe? What is the current preoccupation with statistics doing to the game? Why is there so much talking and arguing in baseball? Does baseball consciously reenact the mythology of the Old West? in this sophisticated, literate, and thoroughly entertaining book, Richard Skolnik addresses these and many other intriguing questions while he explores the underlying tensions in the nation's pastime. On the surface, baseball seems to reflect old, unchanging, more innocent traditions--a harking back to a rural past, a simpler time. But how does that idealistic image jibe with the modern era of big-business baseball, where money considerations dominate, free-agency erodes established loyalties, and specialists are more common than players with all-around skills? Skolnik tellingly probes the symbols of baseball and examines the way the game is played and the way it is viewed and interpreted. As debate builds in the sports community over the future of the game, the consideration of these tensions takes on a special significance and even poignancy. Skolnik finds that perhaps even in its contradictions, baseball can still be interpreted as a living symbol and expression of America. But no baseball book should be too serious. Juicy quotations from the players, dramatic incidents, lively play-by-play accounts, and turn-of-the-century illustrations add spice and zest to a book that every thoughtful fan of baseball is certain to savor.
The title of skolnik's book, Baseball and the Pursuit of Innocence, suggests what he's after. He shuns triteness as the opposite of innocence. That is a high standard, and skolnik does not always reach it. But he comes closest when ...
Chris Von der Ahe has received more than his share of historical treatment. ... 139–40; Larry G. Bowman, “Christian Von der Ahe, the St. Louis Browns, and the World's Championship Playoffs, 1885–1888,” Missouri Historical Review 91 ...
The National League's most powerful owner at the turn of the twentieth century was a despicable character named Andrew Freedman , a New York City lawyer and crony of Boss Richard Croker and his politicos of Tammany Hall .
Seasons in Hell: With Billy Martin, Whitey Herzog and “The Worst Baseball Teams in History”—The ¡973–75 Texas Rangers. New York: Donald I. Fine Books, ¡996. Skolnik, Richard. Baseball and the Pursuit of Innocence: A Fresh Look at the ...
15 Idols and the 1934-36 Diamond Stars Card Set Ron Rembert In a discussion of " baseball fundamentalism " included in his Baseball and the Pursuit of Innocence , Richard Skolnik emphasizes " the essential building blocks of success ...
The Defiant Life and Turbulent Times of Baseball's Biggest Crook Martin Donell Kohout ... A Sparkling, Informal History of the Black Man in Baseball. ... Baseball and the Pursuit of Innocence: A Fresh Look at the Old Ball Game.
NewYork: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1944. Lipman, David. Mr. Baseball: The Story of Branch Rickey. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 1966. Murphy, B. Keith. “Curt Flood and Baseball's Reserve Clause: An Examination of Symbolic Martyrdom.
Duncan J. Watts, “Is Justin Timberlake a Product of Cumulative Advantage? ... Anthony R. Patranis and Marlene E. Turner,“Nine Principles of Successful Affirmative Action: Branch Rickey, Jackie Robinson, and the Integration of Baseball,” ...
Baseball and the Pursuit of Innocence : A Fresh Look at the Old Ball Game . College Station , TX : Texas A & M University Press , 1994 . Skowronek , Stephen . Building a New American State : The Expansion of National Administrative ...
Michael S. Kimmel, “Baseball and the Reconstitution of American Masculinity, 18801920,” in Michael A. Messner and Donald F. Sabor, eds., Sport, Men, and the Gender Order: Critical Feminist Perspectives (Champaign, Illinois: Human ...