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Outline for April 8 session

Japan’s changing sportscape: Baseball and beyond

 I. The Japanese sportscape

 1. National sportscapes

2. Sports in 20th-century Japan

  • Baseball as center sport, driving the sports year
  • Sumo as nativist counter-point + a penumbra of other sports
  • A sports underbelly of pro wrestling and the trinity of gambling sports (horse racing, velodrome cycling, and powerboat racing)
  • Sports locations: schools, companies, professional leagues, international mega-events (Olympics, World Cup, etc.)
  • Sports media: newspapers, daily sports newspapers, television and sports manga/anime

3. Baseball as Japan’s 20th-century center sport: Five roles in shaping popular sensibilities

  • As an imagery of samurai with bats, baseball has fostered a sports nationalism in US-Japan relations
  • As a target of media promotion and crucial site of metropolitan leisure, baseball has been the most popular form of urban edu-tainment
  • As the premier sport in secondary schooling, baseball has been a model for adolescent masculinity
  • As the dominant professional team sport, baseball has been a template for corporate organization
  • As a league sport of local teams, baseball has been a vehicle for regional loyalties and rivalries

 II. The Kōshien high school baseball tournament as national festival

1. Kōshien Stadium over eight decades: From metropolitan modernism to sacred theater

 2. The national high school baseball tournaments at Kōshien: Mainstream Japan’s matsuri (festival)

III. The professional sports world of the Hanshin Tigers

 1. The players

  • Team rosters are large (65-70 players) and the spread of talent is wide
  • There is a first team and a farm team but no minor leagues
  • Baseball players are independent contractors, not company employees
  • Baseball careers are brief and unpredictable
  • Baseball is highly positional, a mix of artisanal and generic skills
  • Baseball is a game of long seasons, of finely-graded statistical measurements and percentages of success, of performing in public
  • Seniority, salary, and performance do not coincide

2. The management

  • Three levels above and behind the players | the manager, the front office, & the parent company
  • The manager: Is he domain lord or corporate brand or just a department head?
  • Factions and frictions in the front office | Suits vs. uniforms, 4 employee types, university factions
  • Hanshin Dentetsu as parent company | The railroad as public entity, conservative management style

3. The spectators and supporters

  • Watching and following: A wide range of affiliation, affection, attention, and activity
  • The stereotype of Hanshin fans as mindless, fanatical groupies
  • Baseball spectatorship as participant-observation
  • The Private Association of Fan Clubs: very organized, very independent, very vocal, very social

4. The media

  • Covering Hanshin Tigers is the biggest beat but toughest job in Kansai sports
  • Hanshin needs media coverage and the media need Hanshin
  • The special role of the sports papers | Graphic design, narratives, and numbers

 IV. Hanshin baseball as regional rivalry and masculine melodrama in mainstream Japan

 1. The Hanshin Tigers and Osaka’s second-city complex

  • Osaka’s metropolitan culture
  • Post-1964 Olympics: Osaka’s second-city complex and the emergence of a “Kansai” identity
  • Hanshin Tigers as the ne’er do well son and lovable loser
  • Hanshin Tigers baseball and the inevitability of loss

2. Hanshin Tigers baseball as masculine, melodramatic workplace soap opera

  • Unpacking baseball masculinity, melodramatic emotion, soap opera narrative, and workplace plots
  • Baseball as an everyday, year-round spectator sport (narratives + numbers –> mediated intimacy)
  • Hanshin Tigers, the nature of the Osaka economy, and the plight of subsidiary company workplaces
  • The role of the sports papers

  V. Japanese sports in the 21st century

 1. The declining fortunes of baseball and sumo

2. The rising prospects of soccer in post-mainstream Japan

  • Soccer as a global field of play
  • Soccer as a team sport that can engage East Asia rivalries
  • Soccer as a sport that combines club and national rivalries
  • Soccer demonstrates flexible citizenship and mutable ethnicity
  • Soccer as a team sport with the possibility of female elite accomplishment