1st Edition

The Baseball Glove History, Material, Meaning, and Value

By David Jenemann Copyright 2018
    172 Pages 30 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    172 Pages 30 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The baseball glove is a ubiquitous item, a crucial piece of equipment in the game of baseball, and it offers the opportunity to examine the production of material culture and social practice at numerous levels. Where and how is a glove made, and how does its manufacture square with the narratives surrounding its place in American cultural life? What are the myths, superstitions, and beliefs surrounding its acquisition, care, use, and significance? How does a glove function as the center of a web of cultural practices that illustrate how individuals relate to a consumer good as a symbol of memory, personal narrative, and national identity? How do the manufacturers of baseball gloves draw upon, promote, and in some sense create these practices? How do these practices and meanings change in other national and cultural contexts?

    The Baseball Glove offers students the opportunity to examine these questions in an engagingly written and illustrated book that promotes hands-on interaction with a quintessential item of material culture. At the same time, the book gives students the space for critical self-reflection about the place of material goods like sporting equipment in their lives, and it provides the chance to learn different methodological approaches to studying everyday objects.

    Series Foreword; Foreword, by Bill "Spaceman" Lee; Acknowledgements; Introduction ¿Segunda Base?: Asking Questions about Baseball Glove ; Chapter 1: Histories; Chapter 2: Material: Making and Shaping; Chapter 3: Meaning; Works Cited

    Biography

    David Jenemann is Associate Professor in the Department of English’s program in film and television studies at the University of Vermont.