Beyond the Coffee House: Masculinities and Social Spaces in the Long Eighteenth Century
Queen Mary University of London, 5th June 2015
This
conference seeks to reassess the masculine
‘types’ which have traditionally been associated with
eighteenth-century historiography through locating men in
different types of associative space. Through an examination of spaces
in which men interacted outside of the traditionally discussed
coffee-house, assembly room, and political public sphere, this
conference hopes to reconsider the parameters within which
we might frame eighteenth-century masculinities. This might extend
to the workplace, the street, the alehouse, the
club, the school, or the university.
Although
the study of eighteenth-century masculinity has progressed greatly in
the last decade, the hegemony of politeness and the cultural
historical bent has been tenacious. This has led to an
abundance of studies on sensibility, politeness, performance, and
self-fashioning, but few on social practice, and even fewer on the
histories of lower-middling and plebeian men.
Through
a series of papers considering masculinity as a construct founded on
quotidian social interaction as well as cultural prescription, the
conference will aim to find new terms with which we can
discuss the eighteenth-century man. Furthermore, the
discussion borne from these papers will consider issues of continuity
and change in terms of masculine identity over the period, as well as
creating a comparative framework for masculinities in different settings
and across socio-economic boundaries.
Papers might address issues such as:
• How masculine identity was formed and consolidated through routines and interactions within the work place.
•
Masculine interaction and performance within social
associative spaces such as the club; the scientific society; the
chop-house; the ale-house; the street brawl; etc.
• Reassessing masculine interaction within traditionally termed ‘public’ spaces.
• Masculinity within institutional and quasi-institutional spaces.
• Masculinity and daily ritual/routine.
• The limits of self-fashioning and polite performance in the history of eighteenth-century masculinity.
Papers
of no more than 20 minutes in length are welcome from
PhD and early career researchers, as well as established academics.
Please send abstracts of 300 words to Elin Jones and Ruth Mather via masculinitiesandsocialspaces@gmail.com by the 20th April.
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