Really, it is.
But work gets
a lot more fun when I have the rare opportunity, and I do mean "rare," to write about baseball, as I did
today with this fun story about a baseball in American culture class. Man, I
wish I had enrolled in this class.
From Aristotle to Aaron, History Class
Explores Baseball's Cultural Roots
Struck out
looking.
That's a
baseball phrase that might also apply to you if you saw the class roster for
this fall and thought history professor Johnny Moore's "Baseball and
American Culture" class looked like an easy A.
There's no
breezing through this class. There are no Eephus pitches to crank out of the
yard.
Look it up.
If you don't
put in the work and do the reading—there's a lot of reading—you have a better
chance of catching up to a Justin Verlander fastball than getting a good grade
in the professor's special topics class. Your average could slip below the
Mendoza Line.
Again, look it
up.
The 17
students or "citizens of baseball," as Moore calls them, borrowing a
line from Ken Burns' 1994 documentary "Baseball," are more than
likely aware of terms like "Eephus pitch" and "Mendoza
Line" after a couple of months of class discussions and reading. For
goodness' sake, there's a lot of reading.
Moore, a
social historian, longtime baseball enthusiast and player (he hit .393 in an
adult league this season), developed the class to give students a chance to
learn more about the national pastime and dig deeper into the game's history
beyond Babe Ruth, Baltimore Chops and box scores.
"I want
them embrace something that is fun but also has a scholarly and intellectual
side to it," Moore said.
Baseball has a
scholarly side? You bet it does. Students in Moore's class not only are reading
the novel "The Natural" but also will delve soon into baseball and
philosophy.
Wait. Are we
mixing baseball and Aristotle?
"Yes,"
Moore said. "We have articles on Aristotle."
Baseball, the
professor said, attracts intellectuals more than any other sport.
"There's
more to it than the interior of baseball, which is the statistics and the
players and such. In the class, we talk about the social history of baseball, the
meaning of baseball within the larger culture."
One of the
most notable examples in relating baseball with the social history of the
United States is Jackie Robinson, an African-American player who 1947 broke
baseball's color barrier as a member of the Brooklyn Dodgers.
"Jackie
Robinson was extremely important to the history of our country," Moore
said. "He came into the league a year to a year and a half before Army
desegregation. He came into the majors seven years before Brown v. Board of
Education, which desegregated schools. He was eight years before Rosa Parks
refused to give up her seat on the bus."
Moore and his
class go even further back into history, all the way back to the Civil War,
discussing its importance to the growth of baseball around the country.
"The
Civil War was incredibly important for the dissemination of baseball because a
lot of people, especially in the South, who didn't know about baseball, learned
to play during the war," Moore said. "When soldiers left to go back
home after the war, they took the game with them."
Class
discussions and readings—did I mention there's a lot of reading? —also include
more recent topic, such as the steroid era of the 1990s and early 2000s, and
women in baseball, Moore said, sporting a Colorado Silver Bullets T-shirt.
So, what's the
most current topic on the baseball class? No, it's not whether Justin Verlander
is dating model Kate Upton but rather a debate over the Washington Nationals'
handling of Stephen Strasburg a year after the pitcher had Tommy John surgery.
And Moore, a
longtime and long-suffering Chicago Cubs fan who has a pair of Roy Halladay's
uniform pants framed on his office wall, like many of his students, disagrees
with giving the ace right-hander a pitch count and cutting his season short in
the middle of a pennant race.
"There
were guys who pitched both ends of a doubleheader 100 years ago," Moore
said, harkening back the game's long, rich history. "I bet those old
pitchers are saying, 'Are you kidding me? We pitched 500 innings in a year, and
this guy pitched 160.' I can just see them having this discussion sitting up in
the field of dreams."
Look it up!
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