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Seeking the Perfect Game - (Contributions to the Study of Popular Culture) by Cordelia Chávez Candelaria (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- In this comprehensive study of baseball in American literature, Candelaria looks primarily at novels to explore how writers have used this quintessential American symbol and to examine what the metaphors and images of the fictional universe of baseball have to tell us about ourselves.
- About the Author: CORDELIA CANDELARIA is Associate Professor of English and Chicano Studies at the University of Colorado, Boulder.
- 175 Pages
- Sports + Recreation, General
- Series Name: Contributions to the Study of Popular Culture
Description
About the Book
In this comprehensive study of baseball in American literature, Candelaria looks primarily at novels to explore how writers have used this quintessential American symbol and to examine what the metaphors and images of the fictional universe of baseball have to tell us about ourselves. Her analysis includes both juvenile and adult sports fiction and other types of literary works that draw significantly on baseball imagery. Candelaria offers a probing analysis of the progression from allegory and romanticism in the earliest baseball fiction to the realism, irony, and solipsism of contemporary narrative.
Candelaria examines the origins and folklore of baseball, the development of its mythic status as the national game or pastime, as well as early literary treatments. Baseball soon emerged as a romantic and heroic metaphor in juvenile and pulp fiction and as a vehicle for ironic comedy in the work of Ring Lardner and other writers of the early decades of the twentieth century. Allusions to baseball in works by such literary masters as Mark Twain, Sinclair Lewis, and Ernest Hemingway emphasize the symbolic dimensions of the game, and its mythic possibilities have been fully exploited by more recent writers, notably Bernard Malamud in The Natural and Philip Roth in The Great American Novel. Increasingly complex levels of abstraction are characteristic of the baseball fiction of Philip Roth, Mark Harris, Jay Neugeboren, John Graham Alexander, and Robert Coover. Candelaria offers a probing analysis of the progression from allegory and romanticism in the earliest baseball fiction to the realism, irony, and solipsism of contemporary narratives. A stimulating work of literary and cultural criticism, this book will appeal to students and scholars of American literature, popular culture, American studies, and physical education, as well as to baseball enthusiasts.
Book Synopsis
In this comprehensive study of baseball in American literature, Candelaria looks primarily at novels to explore how writers have used this quintessential American symbol and to examine what the metaphors and images of the fictional universe of baseball have to tell us about ourselves. Her analysis includes both juvenile and adult sports fiction and other types of literary works that draw significantly on baseball imagery. Candelaria offers a probing analysis of the progression from allegory and romanticism in the earliest baseball fiction to the realism, irony, and solipsism of contemporary narrative.
Candelaria examines the origins and folklore of baseball, the development of its mythic status as the national game or pastime, as well as early literary treatments. Baseball soon emerged as a romantic and heroic metaphor in juvenile and pulp fiction and as a vehicle for ironic comedy in the work of Ring Lardner and other writers of the early decades of the twentieth century. Allusions to baseball in works by such literary masters as Mark Twain, Sinclair Lewis, and Ernest Hemingway emphasize the symbolic dimensions of the game, and its mythic possibilities have been fully exploited by more recent writers, notably Bernard Malamud in The Natural and Philip Roth in The Great American Novel. Increasingly complex levels of abstraction are characteristic of the baseball fiction of Philip Roth, Mark Harris, Jay Neugeboren, John Graham Alexander, and Robert Coover. Candelaria offers a probing analysis of the progression from allegory and romanticism in the earliest baseball fiction to the realism, irony, and solipsism of contemporary narratives. A stimulating work of literary and cultural criticism, this book will appeal to students and scholars of American literature, popular culture, American studies, and physical education, as well as to baseball enthusiasts.Review Quotes
?Candelaria's book is bound to have appeal to students and scholars of American literature, popular culture, and American studies and to professional sports historians. The literate baseball enthusiast, one who is more interested in the baseball in literature' than in the literature in baseball, ' is likely to find this book overbearing in its stuffy language of academic literary criticism and unsatisfying in its narrow focus. Librarians would do better to stock up on the original novels themselves.?-Small Press
"Candelaria's book is bound to have appeal to students and scholars of American literature, popular culture, and American studies and to professional sports historians. The literate baseball enthusiast, one who is more interested in the baseball in literature' than in the literature in baseball, ' is likely to find this book overbearing in its stuffy language of academic literary criticism and unsatisfying in its narrow focus. Librarians would do better to stock up on the original novels themselves."-Small Press
About the Author
CORDELIA CANDELARIA is Associate Professor of English and Chicano Studies at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Her publications include Chicano Poetry: A Critical Introduction (Greenwood Press, 1986), Multiethnic Literature of the United States: Critical Essays and Classroom Resource, a volume of poetry, and numerous articles on American and Chicano literature.