Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
-
1 Burying Lord Uxbridge’s leg: the body of the hero in the early nineteenth century -
2 Brothers in arms? Martial masculinities and family feeling in old soldiers’ memoirs, 1793–1815 -
3 Recalling the comforts of home: bachelor soldiers’ narratives of nostalgia and the re-creation of the domestic interior -
4 Charles Incledon: a singing sailor on the Georgian stage -
5 Visualising the aged veteran in nineteenth-century Britain: memory, masculinity and nation -
6 Hunger and cannibalism: James Hogg’s deconstruction of Scottish military masculinities in The Three Perils of Man or War, Women, and Witchcraft! -
7 Model military men: Charlotte Yonge and the ‘martial ardour’ of ‘a soldier’s daughter’1 -
8 ‘And the individual withers’: Tennyson and the enlistment into military masculinity -
9 Charlotte Brontë’s ‘warrior priest’: St John Rivers and the language of war -
10 ‘Something which every boy can learn’: accessible knightly masculinities in children’s Arthuriana, 1903–11 -
11 ‘A story of treasure, war and wild adventure’: hero-worship, imperial masculinities and inter-generational ideologies in H. Rider Haggard’s 1880s fiction - Epilogue: Gendered virtue, gendered vigour and gendered valour
- Index
(p.vii) Figures
(p.vii) Figures
- Source:
- Martial Masculinities
- Author(s):
- Michael Brown, Anna Maria Barry, Joanne Begiato
- Publisher:
- Manchester University Press
Manchester Scholarship Online requires a subscription or purchase to access the full text of books within the service. Public users can however freely search the site and view the abstracts and keywords for each book and chapter.
Please, subscribe or login to access full text content.
If you think you should have access to this title, please contact your librarian.
To troubleshoot, please check our FAQs, and if you can't find the answer there, please contact us.
- Title Pages
- Figures
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
-
1 Burying Lord Uxbridge’s leg: the body of the hero in the early nineteenth century -
2 Brothers in arms? Martial masculinities and family feeling in old soldiers’ memoirs, 1793–1815 -
3 Recalling the comforts of home: bachelor soldiers’ narratives of nostalgia and the re-creation of the domestic interior -
4 Charles Incledon: a singing sailor on the Georgian stage -
5 Visualising the aged veteran in nineteenth-century Britain: memory, masculinity and nation -
6 Hunger and cannibalism: James Hogg’s deconstruction of Scottish military masculinities in The Three Perils of Man or War, Women, and Witchcraft! -
7 Model military men: Charlotte Yonge and the ‘martial ardour’ of ‘a soldier’s daughter’1 -
8 ‘And the individual withers’: Tennyson and the enlistment into military masculinity -
9 Charlotte Brontë’s ‘warrior priest’: St John Rivers and the language of war -
10 ‘Something which every boy can learn’: accessible knightly masculinities in children’s Arthuriana, 1903–11 -
11 ‘A story of treasure, war and wild adventure’: hero-worship, imperial masculinities and inter-generational ideologies in H. Rider Haggard’s 1880s fiction - Epilogue: Gendered virtue, gendered vigour and gendered valour
- Index