Baseball in Blue and Gray
The National Pastime during the Civil War
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی
May 1, 2003
Any history of early baseball will claim that the rise of the game as the national pastime was leavened by the yeast of the Civil War. This work, however, is the first single-volume history of baseball during the Civil War era. Kirsch (history, Manhattan Univ.) here builds on a previous book, The Creation of American Team Sports, Baseball and Cricket, 1838-72. His contention that baseball used the symbols of an emerging American nationalism to claim its place in popular culture is intriguing. Combined with an examination of a neglected area of sports history, that should have made for a compelling book. Yet it is unsatisfying for a variety of reasons. Kirsch assumes much prior knowledge of a casual reader, such as the difference between town ball and baseball, yet the absence of footnotes will be maddening to scholars. The book contains a skimpy bibliographic essay, but any historian who wishes to build on Kirsch's work will have to re-create the research. This is a good book, but it could have been much better. Recommended for libraries with strong baseball collections.-Randall L. Schroeder, Wartburg Coll. Lib., Waverly, IA
Copyright 2003 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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