Making Men in the Age of Sail

£29.95

Making Men in the Age of Sail

Masculinity, Memoir, and the British Merchant Seafarer, 1860–1914

Gender studies, gender groups European history Maritime history

Author: Graeme J. Milne

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Language: English

Published by: McGill-Queen's University Press

Published on: 15th June 2024

Format: LCP-protected ePub

ISBN: 9780228021841


Myths and stereotypes surrounding seafarers in the Age of Sail persist to this day. Sailors were celebrated for their courage, strength, and skill, yet condemned for militancy, vice, and fecklessness. As sail gave way to steam, sailing-ship mariners became nostalgic symbols of maritime prowess and heritage, representing a timeless, heroic masculinity in an era when the modernizing industrial world was challenging assumptions about gender, class, work, and society.

Drawing on British seafaring memoirs from the late nineteenth century, Making Men in the Age of Sail argues that maritime writing moulded the reading public’s image of the merchant seaman. Authors chronicled their lives as they grew from boy sailors to trained seafarers, telling colourful tales of the men they worked with – most never doubted that the sailing ship had made them better men. Their testimony reinforced and preserved conservative perspectives on seafaring manhood as Britain’s economic and technological priorities continued to evolve in the new steamship age.

Offering a gender analysis of the image of the seafarer

Making Men in the Age of Sail brings the history of British sailors into wider debates about modernity and masculinity.

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