posted on 2023-09-07, 05:10authored byJordan Max-Ryan Englekirk
<p>Over the past thirty years, sports history—especially baseball history—has exploded onto the academic scene and has become a legitimate historical field of study, much more than just a game. While baseball history has emerged as a legitimate historical subfield, baseball umpires themselves have oddly escaped critical analysis. The current literature on umpires is scattered and fragmented with few scholars outside of psychology and law scrutinizing the umpiring profession. Academic historians have all but ignored these “men in blue.” This dissertation rectifies that gap, synthesizing existing secondary literature with original research—such as oral histories, thoughtful investigation of memoirs, artifacts, game film, and archival research—and offering a deep critical analysis of baseball umpires within the context of cultural social constructs. Focusing predominately on the post-1970 era, this thesis examines how historical concepts of American manhood influenced how Major League umpires perform their trade on and off the field. Most importantly, this project demonstrates that a ‘bottoms up’ comprehensive analysis of an otherwise forgotten profession can give us a fresh lens for studying how large historical trends involving masculinity, brotherhood, honor, and health manifest themselves in American popular culture. As a result, by scrutinizing and evaluating the cultural significance of professional baseball umpires and the social constructs by which they adhere, this dissertation will enrich our understanding of baseball history and American culture itself.</p>
History
Publisher
ProQuest
Language
English
Handle
http://hdl.handle.net/1961/auislandora:84070
Committee chair
Peter Kuznick
Committee member(s)
Eric Lohr; Dan Kerr; Roberta Newman
Degree discipline
History
Degree grantor
American University. Department of History
Degree level
Doctoral
Degree name
Ph.D. in History, American University, May 2019
Local identifier
auislandora_84070_OBJ.pdf
Media type
application/pdf
Pagination
391 pages
Access statement
Electronic thesis available to American University authorized users only, per author's request.