No Girls in the Clubhouse: The Exclusion of Women from Baseball

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Summary "Even though teenaged girl Jackie Mitchell once struck out Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig, women are still striking out on the hardball diamond. This book builds on recently published histories of women as amateur and professional players, umpires, sports commentators and fans to analyze the cultural and historical contexts for excluding females from America's past time"--Provided by publisher.

The Exclusion of Women from Professional Baseball 1. Victorian Era Baseball, 3. Bloomer Girls and Barnstorming Exhibition Players, 4.

No Girls in the Clubhouse

Ila Borders, Pt. Notes Includes bibliographical references p. View online Borrow Buy Freely available Show 0 more links Related resource Table of contents only at http: Set up My libraries How do I set up "My libraries"? These 2 locations in All: Open to the public Book; Illustrated English Show 0 more libraries This single location in Queensland: Part II is devoted to amateur baseball, inextricably linked to professional, as Cohen shows. Today, Little League teams are often gender-mixed—legally required by Title IX—but with puberty girls meet social pressure to switch to softball.

Differences in field dimensions, ball size, and pitching mean that softball demands different skills.


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The result is that young women who want professional careers, groomed as softball players in their formative years, are disadvantaged beside young men who have had five to ten more years playing baseball. This deficit in skill-development, Cohen writes, accounts for a lack of qualified professional female baseball players.

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Critiques of Elevate Difference and the content of any review on this site are welcome; however, we will not tolerate flaming, attacks, or any form of abuse. We appreciate constructive criticism and respectful feedback. Please read our full comment policy for details. She points out early in her text that her interest is solely in players and not umpires, coaches, owners, etc.

No Girls in the Clubhouse: The Exclusion of Women from Baseball | Elevate Difference

By opening her book with two stories of children who strive to play baseball but who end up in different places, Cohen makes her overall point. She says talent should drive players, but, unfortunately, gender is the deciding factor.

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Alta Weiss had all the support in the world to play baseball but still struggled because of the barriers society placed in her way. Gender is socially constructed and varies over time, Cohen says, but it is always used to assign people their place in society, even in sports. After establishing her theoretical base, Cohen begins to examine the stories of individuals during different periods in history to see how these ideas about gender led to the inclusion or exclusion of female ballplayers.

During the late-nineteenth century, the notion that women were inferior and dependent on men was a given. As a result, the role of women in baseball reflected these feelings and led to race and class also being emphasized as reasons for some playing and others staying away.

Girls at Vassar who played baseball did so with their first thoughts being about maintaining Victorian ideals of womanhood; learning baseball skills came second. In almost all accounts of these early players and teams, the emphasis in reporting was on image not skill. Cohen points out the changes that allowed for the creation of more bloomer teams in the early-twentieth century as Victorian ideals were challenged.