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Masculinity and political geographies in England,Ireland and North America
Authors:Brendan Kane
Institution:1. Department of History, University of Connecticut, StorrsCT, United Statesbrendan.kane@uconn.edu
Abstract:Historians have recently turned their attention to the place of masculinity in the politics of early-modern England. This essay widens that exploration to include the imperial settings of Ireland and North America. Drawing upon a range of English- and Irish-language sources – including political treatises, maps, state papers and court poetry – it contends that manhood, as a relational value between men, helped structure the form and character of politics in the metropole, the kingdom of Ireland and the American colonies. In all of those settings, the definition of acceptable male behaviour was different, the effect being that political action and theory in each place took on unique features. Consequently, the essay cautions against studying England and its colonies as distinct units of historical analysis and calls for further exploration of the particularities of colonial settings and their influence on the imperial centre. Moreover, the essay aims to demonstrate that masculinity, particularly contest over its proper expression, is an agent in historical change, in this case helping to shape political theory and practice as England developed into a multiple monarchy and budding imperial power in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries.
Keywords:civil–savage discourse  bardic poetry  English colonialism  Atlantic world  cartography  Burghley  Earl of Essex  ethnography  knowledge and power  state formation
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