Campus eBookstore Logo

Skip Navigation LinksEBook Details

Rakes, Highwaymen, and Pirates: The Making of the Modern Gentleman in the Eighteenth Century

Rakes, Highwaymen, and Pirates: The Making of the Modern Gentleman in the Eighteenth Century
Author: Erin Mackie
Price: $32.00
ISBN-10: 0801895308
ISBN-13: 9780801895302
Edition: -1
Get It!:
Delivery: BibliU Reader
Duration: Lifetime

Note:
Copy Selections To Clipboard: User can copy content to the clipboard with the following restriction: Initially allowance of 24 copy selections. Another copy selection allowed every Day. To a maximum of 24 total copy selections.
Printing Pages: User can print pages with the following restriction: Initially allowance of 24 pages. Another page allowed every Day. To a maximum of 24 total pages.

Description

Erin Mackie explores the shared histories of the modern polite English gentleman and other less respectable but no less celebrated eighteenth-century masculine types: the rake, the highwayman, and the pirate.

Mackie traces the emergence of these character types to the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, when traditional aristocratic authority was increasingly challenged. She argues that the development of the modern polite gentleman as a male archetype can only be fully comprehended when considered alongside figures of fallen nobility, which, although criminal, were also glamorous enough to reinforce the same ideological order.

In Evelina’s Lord Orville, Clarissa’s Lovelace, Rookwood’s Dick Turpin, and Caleb Williams's Falkland, Mackie reads the story of the ideal gentleman alongside that of the outlaw, revealing the parallel lives of these seemingly contradictory characters. Synthesizing the histories of masculinity, manners, and radicalism, Rakes, Highwaymen, and Pirates offers a fresh perspective on the eighteenth-century aristocratic male.