Retro Ball Parks: Instant History, Baseball, New American City

Retro Ball Parks: Instant History, Baseball, New American City

by Daniel Rosensweig
Retro Ball Parks: Instant History, Baseball, New American City

Retro Ball Parks: Instant History, Baseball, New American City

by Daniel Rosensweig

Hardcover(First Edition, First Edition)

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Overview

Oriole Park at Camden Yards in Baltimore opened in 1992 as an intentional antidote to the modern multiuse athletic stadium. Home to only one sport and featuring accents of classic parks of previous generations. Oriole Park attempted to reconstitute Baltimore’s past while serving as a cornerstone of downtown redevelopment. Since the gates opened at Camden yards, more than a dozen other American cities have constructed “new old” major league parks - Cleveland, Detroit, Seattle, Pittsburgh, Milwaukee, Atlanta, Denver, Phoenix, San Francisco, Cincinnati, Houston, Arlington, Texas, and San Diego. In Retro Ball Parks, Daniel Rosenweig explores the cultural and economic role of retro baseball parks and traces the cultural implications of re-creating the old in new urban spaces.

According to Rosenweig, the new urban landscape around these retro stadiums often presents a more homogenous culture than the one the new park replaced. Indeed, whole sections of cities have razed in order to build stadiums that cater to clientele eager to enjoy a nostalgic urban experience. This mandate to draw suburban residents and tourists to the heart of downtown, combined with the accompanying gentrification of these newly redeveloped areas, has fundamentally altered historic urban centers.
Focusing on Cleveland’s Jacobs Field as a case study, Rosenweig explores the political economy surrounding the construction of downtown ball parks, which have emerged as key components of urban entertainment-based development. Blending economic and cultural analysis, he considers the intersection of race and class in these new venues. For example, he shows that African American consumers in the commercial district around Jacobs Field have largely been replaced by symbolic representations of African American culture, such as piped-in rap music and Jackie Robinson replica jerseys. He concludes that the question of authenticity, the question of what it means to simultaneously commemorate and commodify the past in retro ball parks, mirrors larger cultural issues regarding the nature and implications of urban redevelopment and gentrification.

Daniel Rosensweig is a professor in the Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies Program at the University of Virginia



Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781572333512
Publisher: University of Tennessee Press
Publication date: 02/16/2005
Series: Sports & Popular Culture
Edition description: First Edition, First Edition
Pages: 264
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.80(d)

About the Author

Daniel Rosensweig is a professor in the Bachelor of Interdisciplinary Studies Program at the University of Virginia.

Table of Contents

Prefacexi
Introduction: Cheap Grace1
1Understanding the Big Picture21
2Baseball's "Beneficient" Revolution57
3Equality versus Authenticity75
4Bleachers: Where the Outside Is In93
5Consuming Blackness113
6Retro Parks in the City of the Instant143
Epilogue: 455169
Notes175
Bibliography195
Index203
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