Playing for Keeps: A History of Early Baseball
Synopsis
In the late 1850s organized baseball was a club-based fraternal sport thriving in the cultures of respectable artisans, clerks and shopkeepers, and middle-class sportsmen. Two decades later it had become an entertainment business run by owners and managers, depending on gate receipts and the increasingly disciplined labor of skilled player-employees. Playing for Keeps is an insightful, in-depth account of the game that became America's premier spectator sport for nearly a century.
Reconstructing the culture and experience of early baseball through a careful reading of the sporting press, baseball guides, and the correspondence of the player-manager Harry Wright, Warren Goldstein discovers the origins of many modern controversies during the game's earliest decades.
Publisher information
- Publisher: Cornell University Press
- ISBN: 9780801418297
- Number of pages: 182
- Dimensions: 235 x 155 x 22 mm
- Weight: 907g
- Languages: English
