Add free shipping to your order with these great books
Manliness in Britain, 1760-1900 : Bodies, Emotion, and Material Culture - Joanne Begiato

Manliness in Britain, 1760-1900

Bodies, Emotion, and Material Culture

By: Joanne Begiato, James Ryan (Editor)

Paperback | 15 March 2022

At a Glance

Paperback


RRP $69.99

$67.90

or 4 interest-free payments of $16.98 with

 or 

Aims to ship in 5 to 10 business days

Manliness in Britain offers a new account of masculinity in the long nineteenth century: more corporeal and material, more emotional, more cross-class, and less heteronormative than other studies. Using diverse textual, visual, and material culture sources, it shows that masculinities were produced and disseminated through men's bodies - very often working-class ones - and the emotions and material culture associated with them.

The book disrupts the chronology of nineteenth-century masculinities, since it stretches from the ages of feeling, revolution, and reform to those of militarism, imperialism, representative democracy, and mass media. It also queers these histories, by recognising that male and female desire for idealised male bodies and the gender attributes they represented was integral to the success of manliness. Imagined working-class men such as soldiers, sailors, and industrial workers were central to broader ideas of manliness and unmanliness. They not only offered didactic lessons for the working classes and made the labouring ranks appear less threatening, they also provide insights into the production of middle-class men's identities.

The book shows that this melding of bodies, emotions, and material culture created emotionalised bodies and objects, which facilitated the conveying, reproducing, and fixing of manliness in society. As such, it will be vital for students and academics in the history of bodies, emotions, gender, and material culture.
Industry Reviews

'Joanne Begiato's Manliness in Britain, 1760-1900 breaks new ground in exploring manliness in Britain as an expansive body of gendered meanings that was most fully elaborated by representatives of the middle class but was also deeply resonant with the working class. [...] Overall, this is a virtuoso deployment of three interlinked strands in the new cultural history: the somatic, the material, and the emotional. That conceptual range has made possible a book on manliness unrivaled in its contextual range and its interpretive insights.'
Journal of British Studies

More in Material Culture

Shoes and the Georgian Man - Matthew McCormack
The Children of Ash and Elm : A History of the Vikings - Neil Price
Notes on 'Camp' : Penguin Modern - Susan Sontag
A Coveted Possession : The Rise and Fall of the Piano in Australia - Michael Atherton
The Hidden History of the Smock Frock : Deception and Disguise - Alison  Toplis
Shoes and the Georgian Man - Matthew McCormack
Restaurant : Object Lessons - Brian Duff
Saxophone : Object Lessons - Mollie Hawkins
Islamicate Textiles : Fashion, Fabric, and Ritual - Faegheh  Shirazi