Rating: ***
Tags: Business & Economics, Organizational Behavior, Lang:en
Publisher: Greenwood Publishing Group
Added: April 4, 2020
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
Despite its status as one of the oldest and most
enduringly popular sports in history, wrestling has been
pushed to the background of the current American sports
scene. Most people today would have a hard time even
considering wrestling (with some of its modern theatrics) in
the same terms as track and field or boxing. But until the
1920s, wrestling stood as a legitimate professional sport in
this country, and a widely practiced amateur one as well. Its
past respectability may not have endured, but the advent of
cable television in the 1980s offered the sport a renewed
opportunity to play a determining role in American popular
culture. This opportunity was not wasted, and wrestlers now
assume places in politics and film at the highest levels.
Ringside , the first work to fully examine the
history of professional wrestling in this country, provides
an illuminating and colorful account of all of the various
athletes, entertainers, businessmen, and national outlooks
that have determined wrestling's erratic route through
American history. This chronological work begins with a brief
account of wrestling's global history, and then proceeds to
investigate the sport's growth as a specifically American
institution. Wrestling has continued to survive in the face
of technological developments, scandals, public ridicule, and
a lack of centralized control, and today this supremely
adaptable entertainment form represents, in sum, an
international industry capable of attracting enormous
television and pay-per-view audiences, along with massive
amounts of advertising and merchandizing revenue.
Ringside focuses on the business of wrestling as
well as on the performers and their in-ring antics, and
offers readers a fully nuanced examination of the development
of professional wrestling in America. **