Protecting Home: Class, Race, And Masculinity In Boys' Baseball
Editorial Reviews
Book Description
"The best traditions of community and urban sociology come alive in this fantastic work of participant observation. Sherri Grasmuck shows us the people, narrates their lives, and links them to as sophisticated a take on race and class to be found in any contemporary urban ethnography. She is a beautiful writer with that rarest of giftsa sober critical voice, an unrelenting systematicity, the wisdom of personal experience, and a sense of humor that comes together in a deep act of interpretation and explanation. Janet Goldwaters fantastic photographs merge with the text to produce a documentary account of how we live today in multicultural America, one that takes its place among the finest firsthand studies."Mitchell Duneier, Princeton University, author of Sidewalk and Slims Table
"Based on skillful ethnographic research, and deploying a creative and evocative narrative voice, Protecting Home gives us fresh insights into the ways that youth baseball shapes race, gender, and class relations in a changing community. With this elegant piece of research, Grasmuck has connected and gone deep."Michael A. Messner, author of Taking the Field: Women, Men, and Sports
"An inspired and inspiring look at the rhythms of life in and around urban youth baseball. . . . Sherri Grasmuck shatters our stereotypes surrounding gender, class, and race."Kathleen Gerson, author of No Mans Land: Mens Changing Commitments to Family and Work
Through a close exploration of a boys baseball league in a gentrifying neighborhood of Philadelphia, sociologist Sherri Grasmuck reveals the accommodations and tensions that characterize multicultural encounters in contemporary American public life.
Chapters explore coaching styles, parental involvement, institutional politics, parent-child relations, and childrens experiences. Grasmuck identifies differences in the ways that the mostly white, working-class "old-timers" and the racially diverse, professional newcomers relate to the neighborhood.
Through an innovative combination of narrative approaches, this book succeeds both in capturing the immediacy of boys interaction at the playing field and in contributing to sophisticated theoretical debates in urban studies, the sociology of childhood, and masculinity studies.
About the Author
Sherri Grasmuck is a professor of sociology at Temple University. She is the coauthor of Between Two Islands: Dominican International Migration. Janet Goldwater is a photographer and documentary filmmaker. She coproduced the award-winning PBS broadcasts Maggie Growls, Landowska, and Motherless: A Legacy of Loss from Illegal Abortion.
Protecting Home: Class, Race, And Masculinity In Boys' Baseball,Sherri Grasmuck,Janet Goldwater,Rutgers University Press,0813535557,21st century,Baseball for children,Boys,Case studies,Gender Studies,Pennsylvania,Philadelphia,Philadelphia (Pa.),Pop Arts / Pop Culture,Popular Culture - General,Social Science,Social aspects,Social conditions,Sociology,Sociology - General
Protecting Home: Class, Race, And Masculinity In Boys' Baseball
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