From Honolulu to Brooklyn : running the American empire's base paths with Buck Lai and the travelers from Hawai'i

書誌事項

From Honolulu to Brooklyn : running the American empire's base paths with Buck Lai and the travelers from Hawai'i

Joel S. Franks

Rutgers University Press, c2022

  • : cloth

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注記

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

From 1912 to 1916, a group of baseball players from Hawai' i barnstormed the U.S. mainland. While initially all Chinese, the Travelers became more multiethnic and multiracial with ballplayers possessing Chinese, Japanese, Hawaiian, and European ancestries. As a group and as individuals the Travelers' experiences represent a still much too marginalized facet of baseball and sport history. Arguably, they traveled more miles and played in more ball parks in the American empire than any other group of ballplayers of their time. Outside of the major leagues, they were likely the most famous nine of the 1910s, dominating their college opponents and more than holding their own against top-flight white and black independent teams. And once the Travelers' journeys were done, a team leader and star Buck Lai gained fame in independent baseball on the East Coast of the U.S., while former teammates ran base paths and ran for political office as they confronted racism and colonialism in Hawai' i.

目次

Introduction Chapter One: Defying Assumptions: Baseball, Asians, and Hawai' i Chapter Two: The Travelers from Hawai' i: Culture, Capitalism, and Baseball Chapter Three: The Travelers Take the Field Chapter Four: Crossings of Baseball's Racial Fault Lines, 1917-1918 Chapter Five: Peripatetic Pros: 1919-1934 Chapter Six: The Travelers Back Home: Hawai' i Between the Wars Chapter Seven: Buck Lai's Journeys, 1935-1937 Chapter Eight: Playing in the Twilight Conclusion Acknowledgements

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