Bleacher Bugs and Fifty-Centers: The Social Stratification of Baseball Fans through Stadium Design, 1880–1920

Pub Date : 2021-07-08 DOI:10.5749/buildland.28.1.0005
P. Carlino
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

abstract:Between 1860 and 1920, Americans grappled with the demographic and political changes of modernization. American baseball-team owners used furniture selection and arrangement to invite upperand middle-class native-born white men and women to the center of spectatorship and to marginalize nonwhite, immigrant, and working-class fans. Owners installed a new type of seating, the opera chair, to tame rowdy male audiences and protect the bodies of white women who attended frequent ladies' days. In newspapers, owners and sportswriters stereotyped spectators by seating section. Fans embraced, and at times resisted, the status imposed upon them through stadium design. A close reading of the interior landscape recorded in newspaper descriptions and photographs reveals spaces divided into hierarchical groups designed to assuage the anxieties of bourgeois white audiences. Professional baseball teams invited all into communal spectatorship to watch the national game, but segregated fans in pursuit of profit.
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看台虫和五十中心:棒球球迷的社会分层通过体育场设计,1880-1920
1860年至1920年间,美国人努力应对现代化带来的人口和政治变化。美国棒球队的老板们利用家具的选择和安排,邀请中上阶层的本土出生的白人男女来到观众的中心,并将非白人、移民和工人阶级的球迷边缘化。老板们安装了一种新型的座位——歌剧椅,以驯服吵闹的男性观众,并保护经常参加女士日的白人女性的身体。在报纸上,老板和体育记者通过座位划分对观众形成刻板印象。球迷们欣然接受,有时也会抵制这种通过球场设计强加给他们的地位。仔细阅读报纸描述和照片中记录的室内景观,就会发现空间被划分为等级群体,旨在缓解资产阶级白人观众的焦虑。职业棒球队邀请所有人到公共场所观看全国比赛,但为了追求利润,将球迷隔离开来。
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