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Negotiating Masculinities and Modernity in the Maritime World, 1815-1940: A Sailor's Progress? (2021)

Contributor(s): Downing, Karen (Editor), Thayer, Johnathan (Editor), Begiato, Joanne (Editor)

ISBN: 9783030779450

Publisher: Palgrave MacMillan

Hardcover
$139.99
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Pub Date: January 17, 2022

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Illustrated

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.75" H x 8.27" L x 5.83" W ( 1.19 lbs) 313 pages

Series: Global Studies in Social and Cultural Maritime History

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: This book explores ideas of masculinity in the maritime world in the nineteenth and the first half of the twentieth century. During this time commerce, politics and technology supported male privilege, while simultaneously creating the polite, consumerist and sedentary lifestyles that were perceived as damaging the minds and bodies of men. This volume explores this paradox through the figure of the sailor, a working-class man whose representation fulfilled numerous political and social ends in this period. It begins with the enduring image of romantic, heroic veterans of the Napeolonic wars, takes the reader through the challenges to masculinities created by encounters with other races and ethnicities, and with technological change, shifting geopolitical and cultural contexts, and ends with the fragile portrayal of masculinity in the imagined Nelson. In doing so, this edited collection shows that maritime masculinities (ideals, representations and the seamen themselves) were highly visible and volatile sites for negotiating the tensions of masculinities with civilisation, race, technology, patriotism, citizenship, and respectability during the long nineteenth century.

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