34th Annual LaFollette Lecture-Todd McDorman
Last year's LaFollette Lecturer, Associate Professor of Classics Jeremy Hartnett, introduced McDorman. 'Todd believes in the power of talking, but also of listening,' Hartnett said. ' He approaches baseball as a fan, but also as a discerning rhetorical critic. The very way that baseball has long captured the national imagination and the number of intellects who have grappled with its meaning suggests that Todd's turn to baseball is fun, yes, but serious: This work is about America, how we talk, work, play, and remember together.'
The poet Donald Hall wrote that 'baseball is a place where memory gathers,' and that place, Professor of Rhetoric Todd McDorman believes, is shaped and re-shaped by the way we write about, talk about, and represent it visually. In the 34th Annual LaFollette Lecture in Salter Hall Thursday, he offered a convincing argument that the study of this rhetoric of baseball offers insights into the ways we shape and re-shape the memories of our own communities.
McDorman told his Salter Hall audience that baseball and the study of rhetoric became intertwined his own life after a sixth-grade media fair project. 'When I was eight, my father and I began listening to Cincinnati Reds games, and we began collecting baseball cards,' McDorman recalled. (His first card was of Pete Rose—shown on screen behind him in the above photo). 'Baseball transported me into a different world, and I began devouring information about it, both its numbers and its stories. It was a rich, if imaginary, world.'