Edition |
1st ed. |
Description |
xii, 191 p. ; 23 cm. |
Series |
Global masculinities |
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Global masculinities series.
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Summary |
"The question of what it meant to be a gentleman haunted Britons throughout the long eighteenth century. This period saw the gentleman emerge as the dominant persona of essayists, critics, and male conduct book writers as well as the ideal husband imagined by the authors of heroine-centered domestic fiction. In Becoming the Gentleman, Jason D. Solinger explains why this masculine ideal became a cultural obsession. What was at stake in the definition of the gentleman, he argues, was nothing less than a new kind of ruling-class male: a modern man whose knowledge of the world fit him for London parlors and imperial boardrooms. Examining such authors as John Locke, Alexander Pope, Frances Burney, Jane Austen and Sir Walter Scott, Solinger's account will appeal to literary historians as well as readers interested in the role nostalgia plays in forging the present."--Publisher's website. |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (p. [171]-181) and index. |
Contents |
Gentlemen and their Knowledge of the World -- The Politics of Alexander Pope's Urbanity -- Popular Writing and the Promise of Gentility from The Connoisseur to Evelina -- Austen's Fiction in the Age of Commerce -- Walter Scott and the Gentrification of Empire. |
Subject |
English literature -- History and criticism.
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Men in literature.
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Masculinity in literature.
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ISBN |
9780230391833 (hbk.) |
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0230391834 (hbk.) |
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