Craft, Gender and Material Production in the Long Nineteenth Century [special issue]
- Categories
- Article/Artikel
- Magazine Title
- Nineteenth-century gender studies
- Magazine Year
- 2018
- Magazine Number
- 2
- Creator
- Gowrley, Freya > (ed.)
- Creator
- Faulkner, Katie > (ed.)
- Thesaurus
- literatuur, ambachts-, industrie- en transportberoepen, mannelijkheid, Verenigd Koninkrijk, Egypte, Israël, Italië, Caraïbisch gebied, 19e eeuw
- Description
- This special issue identifies craft as a powerful lens through which to think about nineteenth-century gender and its construction, playing on the linguistic and semantic flexibility of craft and its many manifestations in order to better understand the complexities of nineteenth-century masculinity. Content: - Maya Wassell Smith, “‘The fancy work what sailors make’: Material and Emotional Creative Practice in Masculine Seafaring Communities” - Serena Dyer, “Masculinities, Wallpaper, and Crafting Domestic Space within the University, 1795-1914” - Karen Harvey, “The End of Craft? The Force of Embodied Male Labour in Industrial Manufacture in Early-Nineteenth Century Sheffield and Birmingham” - Aurélie Petiot, “Crafting Colonial Masculinity: Charles Robert Ashbee’s Educational Programme in Egypt and Jerusalem, 1917-1921” - Penelope Wickson, “Wearing His Heart on His Sleeve: Odoardo Borrani’s The Seamstresses of the Red Shirts and the Cult of Garibaldi” - Chloe Northrop, “Satirical Prints and Imperial Masculinity: Johnny Newcome in the West Indies”