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Men of Parts: Masculine Embodiment and the Male Leg in Eighteenth-Century England
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2015
Abstract
This essay explores changes in eighteenth-century male clothing in the context of the history of sexual difference, gender roles, and masculinity. The essay contributes to a history of dress by reconstructing a range of meanings and social practices through which men's clothing was understood by its consumers. Furthermore, critically engaging with work on the “great male renunciation,” the essay argues that the public authority that accrued to men through their clothing was based not on a new image of a rational disembodied man but instead on an emphasis on the male anatomy and masculinity as intrinsically embodied. Drawing on findings from the material objects of eighteenth-century clothing, visual representations, and evidence from the archival records of male consumers, the essay adopts an interdisciplinary approach that allows historians to study sex and gender as embodied, rather than simply performed. In so doing, the essay not only treats “embodiment” as an historical category but also responds to recent shifts in the historical discipline and the wider academy towards a more corporealist approach to the body.
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References
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48 Rublack, Dressing Up, 19; Styles, Dress of the People, 63–69.
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98 Ibid., 188.
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100 Ibid., 35–77.
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110 Ibid.
111 Crossly, Signification of most Things that are born in Heraldry, 50.
112 M. de La Beaumelle [Laurent Angliviel], Reflections of ***** being a Series of Political Maxims (London, 1753), 169.
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119 “Embodied citizenship” as used in contemporary political theory refers to the ways in which the material body affects the citizenship status of political subjects. See, for example, Bacchi, Carol Lee and Beasley, Chris, “Citizen Bodies: Is Embodied Citizenship a Contradiction in Terms?” Critical Social Policy 22, no. 2 (May 2002): 324–52CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Titchkosky, Tanya, “Governing Embodiment: Technologies of Constituting Citizens with Disabilities,” Canadian Journal of Sociology / Cahiers Canadiens de Sociologie 28, no. 4 (Fall 2003): 517–42CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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