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BETWEEN POISE AND POWER: EMBODIED MANLINESS IN EIGHTEENTH- AND NINETEENTH-CENTURY BRITISH CULTURE*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 September 2016
Abstract
This paper explores representations of the manly body and the ways in which its relationship with masculine identity and embodied selfhood changed over time and class. It spans a period in which different types of masculinities were dominant, from the later eighteenth-century man of feeling to the later nineteenth-century muscular Christian, and proposes that an embodied approach offers a more nuanced consideration of the ways in which ideals of masculinity were culturally viewed and utilised. First, it provides a chronology of the manner in which the ideal manly body changed over the two centuries, demonstrating that abstract masculine values were always rooted in male bodies. Secondly, it proposes that although most idealised masculine identities were elite, attention to the more corporeal aspects of gender offers evidence that there were features of the manly body, for example hardness, that appealed across social ranks.1 Elite men valorised idealised working-class men's bodies and saw in them something to emulate. Moreover, working-class men used classically inspired figures to represent themselves when formulating class and gender identities.
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- Copyright © Royal Historical Society 2016
Footnotes
I would like to thank a number of people for their contributions to this paper. First, my thanks to Tim Reinke-Williams for inviting me to give the lecture upon which it is based, and to the participants at the RHS Symposium: Masculinity and the Body in Britain, 1500–1900, for their questions and observations. I am also grateful to Matthew Craske, Christiana Payne and Andrew Spicer for their support and judicious comments. Finally, sincere thanks to Michael Brown for discussing and reading the paper in its several versions.
References
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128 Ibid., 107.
129 Ibid., plates 1–90.
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133 Ibid., 149–50.
134 Ravenhill-Johnson, Art and Ideology, 2.
135 Ibid., plate 21. For colour version of engraving, see www.unionhistory.info/Display.php?irn=7000001&QueryPage=AdvSearch.php.
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137 Tullie House Museum & Art Gallery, Carlisle http://www.tulliehouse.co.uk/thecollection/cotton-spinners-banner-victorian
138 Gorman, Banner Bright, 113.
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