Inventing Baseball Heroes

Inventing Baseball Heroes - Cover

Ty Cobb, Christy Mathewson, and the Sporting Press in America

by Amber Roessner

248 pages / 5.50 x 8.50 inches / 14 halftones

ebook available

History / American History | Language Arts / Journalism | Sport & Recreation / Sports History

Hardcover / 9780807156117 / June 2014
In Inventing Baseball Heroes, Amber Roessner examines “herocrafting” in sports journalism through an incisive analysis of the work surrounding two of baseball’s most enduring personalities—Detroit Tigers outfielder Ty Cobb and New York Giants pitcher Christy Mathewson. While other scholars have demonstrated that the mythmakers of the Golden Age of Sports Writing (1920–1930) manufactured heroes out of baseball players for the mainstream media, Roessner probes further, with a penetrating look at how sportswriters compromised emerging professional standards of journalism as they crafted heroic tales that sought to teach American boys how to be successful players in the game of life.
 
Cobb and Mathewson, respectively stereotyped as the game’s sinner and saint, helped shape their public images in the mainstream press through their relationship with four of the most prominent sports journalists of the time: Grantland Rice, F. C. Lane, Ring Lardner, and John N. Wheeler. Roessner traces the interactions between the athletes and the reporters, delving into newsgathering strategies as well as rapport-building techniques, and ultimately revealing an inherent tension in objective sports reporting in the era. 
 
Inventing Baseball Heroes will be of interest to scholars of American history, sports history, cultural studies, and communication. Its interdisciplinary approach provides a broad understanding of the role sports journalists played in the production of American heroes.

Amber Roessner is associate professor in the School of Journalism and Electronic Media at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. She is the author of Inventing Baseball Heroes: Ty Cobb, Christy Mathewson, and the Sporting Press in America.

Praise for Inventing Baseball Heroes

“A wonderful book for anyone interested in the histories of the ‘national pastime,’ a characterization partially invented (or ‘crafted’) by sportswriters, or of journalism.”—Journalism History

WBIR Interview with Amber Roessner (video)

Watch Amber Roessner discuss her book with Beth Haynes of WBIR!

SOURCE: WBIR

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