This study of a unique social world probes beneath the thrill
and spectacle of horse racing into the lives of the "honest boys,"
the "gyps," the "manipulators," the "stoops," and the "Chalk
eaters"--the constituents of race track society and the players of
the racing game. With scientific precision and journalistic vigor,
Scott describes the everyday activities--the objectives and
strategies--of those whose lives are organized around track
proceedings and who compete with chance and one another.
The players in the racing game range from track owners to stable
boys, from law enforcers to lawbreakers, and from casual sportsmen
to pathologically addicted gamblers. Considering the
self-interests, the normative and operational codes, and the
interactional relationships among the major types and subtypes of
participants, the author defines the components of strategic
movement within the framework of rules and resources to show how a
player's relations to the "means of production" governs his
behavior.
The fruitful application of sociological theory and method to an
unusually interesting social context makes this particularly useful
still for courses in social problems and the sociology of
organizations and of leisure.
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