Never Just a Game: Players, Owners, and American Baseball to 1920

Never Just a Game: Players, Owners, and American Baseball to 1920 book cover

Never Just a Game: Players, Owners, and American Baseball to 1920

Author(s): Robert F. Burk (Author)

  • Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
  • Publication Date: 30 Mar. 1994
  • Edition: New
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 302 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0807821225

Book Description

America’s national pastime has been marked from its inception by bitter struggles between owners and players over profit, power, and prestige. In this book, the first installment of a highly readable, comprehensive labor history of baseball, Robert Burk describes the evolution of the ballplaying work force: its ethnocultural makeup, its economic position, and its battles for a place at the table in baseball’s decision-making structure.

In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the growing popularity of baseball as a spectator sport and the dramatic upsurge of America’s urban population created conditions that led to franchise competition, the development of rival leagues, and trade wars, in turn triggering boom-and-bust cycles, franchise bankruptcies, and league mergers. According to Burk, players repeatedly tried to use these circumstances to better their economic positions by playing one team off against another. Their successes proved short-lived, however, because their own internal divisions, exploited by management, undercut attempts to create collective-bargaining institutions. By 1920, owners still held the upper hand in the labor-management battle, but as today’s sports pages show, owners did not secure a long-term solution to their labor problems.

View on Amazon

电子书代发PDF格式价格30我要求助
未经允许不得转载:Wow! eBook » Never Just a Game: Players, Owners, and American Baseball to 1920