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How Major League Baseball Parks Reveal the White Middle-Class's Views on Cities

Tannenbaum, Seth S.

Journal of sport history, 2023-04, Vol.50 (1), p.32-47 [Periódico revisado por pares]

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  • Título:
    How Major League Baseball Parks Reveal the White Middle-Class's Views on Cities
  • Autor: Tannenbaum, Seth S.
  • É parte de: Journal of sport history, 2023-04, Vol.50 (1), p.32-47
  • Descrição: Abstract Since the 1950s, municipalities across the country have built stadiums to attract or retain Major League Baseball (MLB) teams. Because those teams were city-based and team owners have consistently aimed to attract middle- and upper-class white fans to their ballparks, changes in ballparks highlight how the white middle- and upper-classes thought about cities. When ballparks were popular, they provided something middle- and upper-class white fans were looking for; when they were not, something was missing. Using Houston's Astrodome, Baltimore's Camden Yards, and suburban Atlanta's Truist Park, this article traces a cyclical process in the locations of MLB ballparks and how those locations made most white fans feel safe. It shows that cities repelled middle- and upper-class whites in the 1960s and 1970s, that predictable facsimiles of urban life drew them in the 1990s, and that they again found cities unappealing in the 2010s.
  • Idioma: Inglês

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