New Books in History

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, reframes baseball as a cultural and historical phenomenon. He explores rituals, fandom as quasi-religion, baseball’s urban and global roots, Jackie Robinson’s wider significance, labor struggles and sabermetrics, and how media and international stars reshape the game. Short, wide-ranging conversations connect baseball to race, labor, technology, and modern life.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
ANECDOTE

A Historian's Fan Confession

  • Henkin began writing about baseball partly as a fan who had to bracket his own beliefs to analyze the sport.
  • He compared this to a religious believer stepping back from doctrine to study Catholicism objectively.
ANECDOTE

Fan Rituals Echo Religious Practice

  • Henkin connects sports superstitions to religious practices from his Orthodox Jewish upbringing.
  • He treats fan rituals like flipped caps as comparable to religious observances about head coverings.
INSIGHT

Why Baseball Thrives In Specific Countries

  • Baseball spread internationally via varied routes, not solely U.S. empire or occupation.
  • Japan and Cuba played outsized roles due to imperial projects and commercial/media links respectively.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app