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First published on May 7, 2008
Men and Masculinities 2008, doi:10.1177/1097184X08318181


Article

The Gentleman Boxer: Boxing, Manners, and Masculinity in Eighteenth-Century England

Karen Downing*

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: karen.downing{at}anu.edu.au.


   Abstract
Prize fighting was enormously popular during the second half of the eighteenth century in Britain. It became a fashion perhaps experienced as keenly by contemporary men of all classes as the "culture of sensibility" that describes this period of increasing politeness in society. This juxtaposition illustrates a vexing eighteenth-century issue: could a man be both polite and manly? This article argues that men across the social spectrum found in the "gentleman boxer" a resolution to this issue. The gentleman boxer synthesized traditionally held views of manliness with the civilizing effects of modern consumerism, acknowledged the concerns and aspirations of men of all classes, and responded to the political imperative for fighting men capable of forging a new nation bent on empire building. The gentleman boxer was both polite and manly and a fine example of a masculine identity negotiated between individual conceptions of the self and the material circumstances in which that self is found.


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