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Northern Sandlots - A Social History of Maritime Baseball

Howell, Colin D.

$25.00 USD • Used

Original pictorial black trade paperback with colour illustration of baseball player, and white, orange and black lettering. Previous owner's name. Top corner of back cover creased. The author exa...

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Original pictorial black trade paperback with colour illustration of baseball player, and white, orange and black lettering. Previous owner's name. Top corner of back cover creased. The author examines the social and economic influence of baseball in the Maritimes, starting in the late 19th century. 285 pp. including Index.

From Publisher:

Northern Sandlots is the story of the rise and fall of regional baseball on the northeast coast of North America. Colin Howell writes about the social and economic influence of baseball on community life in the Maritimes and New England during the past century, from its earliest spread from cities and towns into the countryside, to the advent of television, and the withering of local semi-pro leagues after the Second World War.

The history of sport is an important feature of the new' social history. Howell discusses how baseball has been deeply implicated in debates about class and gender, race and ethnicity, regionalism and nationalism, work and play, and the commercialization of leisure. Baseball's often overlooked connection to medical and religious discourse is also explored.

Howell begins with the game's earliest days when it was being molded by progressive reformers to meet what they considered to be the needs of an emerging industrial society. He then turns to the interwar years when baseball in the Maritimes became strictly amateur, revealing an emerging sense of community solidarity and regional identity. The game flourished at the community level after the Second World War, before it eventually succumbed to the new, commodified, and nationally marketed sporting culture that accompanied the development of the modern consumer society. Finally, Howell shows that fundamental changes in the nature of capitalism after the war, and in the economic and social reality of small towns and cities, hastened the death of a century-long tradition of competitive, community-level baseball.

Howell has written an informative and insightful social history that examines the transformation of Maritime community life from the 1860s to the late twentieth century.

Product Info

ISBN: 0802069428

ISBN-13: 9780802069429

Publisher: University of Toronto Press

Year: 1995

Type: Used

Binding: Softcover

First Edition

Seller Info

DaveShootsBookseller

Address: 363 Fundy Drive Saint John, New Brunswick

Website: https://www.daveshootsbookseller.com

Country: Canada