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David M. Henkin, "Out of the Ballpark: How to Think about Baseball" (Oxford UP, 2026)

Feb 18, 2026
David M. Henkin, a UC Berkeley historian of nineteenth-century American culture, explores baseball as a broad cultural phenomenon. He traces its urban roots, global spread, and ritualistic fandom. Conversations touch on Jackie Robinson’s wider social meaning, labor struggles and sabermetrics, and how media and international stars like Shohei Ohtani reshape the game’s role in modern life.
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ANECDOTE

Religious Roots Inform Fan Superstitions

  • Henkin shares that he was raised in an Orthodox Jewish home and remains traditionally observant.
  • He links religious headwear superstitions to baseball fan rituals and magical thinking.
INSIGHT

Baseball's Global Map Follows Regional Networks

  • Baseball spread internationally unevenly through varied contacts, not just U.S. empire.
  • Japanese imperial networks and Cuban commercial/media ties better explain where baseball took hold.
INSIGHT

Robinson Was A National Turning Point

  • Jackie Robinson's integration mattered more to American society and Cold War optics than to baseball alone.
  • Robinson's entry accelerated integration and undermined the Negro Leagues while serving larger national narratives.
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