The 'perpetual fair': Gender, disorder, and urban amusement in eighteenth-century London

The 'perpetual fair': Gender, disorder, and urban amusement in eighteenth-century London

The 'perpetual fair': Gender, disorder, and urban amusement in eighteenth-century London

The 'perpetual fair': Gender, disorder, and urban amusement in eighteenth-century London

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Overview

Each summer, a 'perpetual fair' plagued eighteenth-century London, a city in transition overrun by a burgeoning population. City officials attempted to control disorderly urban amusement according to their own gendered understandings of order and morality. Frequently derided as locations of dangerous femininity disrupting masculine commerce, fairs withstood regulation attempts. Fairs were important in the lives of ordinary Londoners as sites of women’s work, sociability, and local and national identity formation. Rarely studied as vital to London’s modernisation, urban fairs are a microcosm of London’s transforming society, demonstrating how metropolitan changes were popularly contested. This study contributes to our understanding of popular culture and modernisation in Britain during the formative years of its global empire.

Fascinating examples drawn from literary and visual culture make this an engaging study for scholars and students of late Stuart and early Georgian Britain, urban and gender history, World’s Fairs and cultural studies.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780719090912
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Publication date: 05/31/2014
Series: Gender in History
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 5.70(w) x 8.60(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Anne Wohlcke is Associate Professor of History at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona

Table of Contents

Introduction: making a mannered metropolis and taming the ‘perpetual fair’
1. ‘London’s Mart’: the crowds and culture of eighteenth–century London
2. ‘Heroick informers’ and London spies: religion, politeness and reforming impulses in late seventeenth and early eighteenth–century London
3. Regulation and resistance: wayward apprentices and other ‘evil disposed persons’ at London’s fairs
4. ‘Dirty Molly’ and ‘the greasier Kate’: The feminine threat to urban order
5. Locating the fair sex at work
6. Clocks, monsters, and drolls: gender, race, nation, and the amusements of London fairs
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index

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