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Gender, Emotions and Power, 1750–2020: Part II: Power and place-making: class, hygiene and race in the British Empire
Gender, Emotions and Power, 1750–2020
Part II: Power and place-making: class, hygiene and race in the British Empire
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Gender, Emotions and Power, 1750–2020
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table of contents
Cover
Series
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of illustrations
Notes on contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I: Gender, class and sexuality in the negotiation of political power
1. ‘My old eyes weep but I am proud of my own children’: grief and revolutionary motherhood in the Soviet 1920s
2. Emotion as a tool of Russian bisexual and transgender women’s online activism: a case study
3. Sounding the socialist heroine: gender, revolutionary lyricism and Korean war films
4. Emotions at work: solidarity in the Liverpool dock dispute, 1995–8
Part II: Power and place-making: class, hygiene and race in the British Empire
5. White pride, male anger and the shame of poverty: gendered emotions and the construction of white working-class identity in interwar Southern Rhodesia
6. ‘Africans smell different’: disgust, fear and the gendering of interracial intimacy in Kenya and Zambia
7. Gender, mission, emotion: building hospitals for women in northwestern British India
Part III: Modern Europe’s public sphere and the policing of the gendered body
8. ‘The sap that runs in it is the same’: how the ideal of romantic love challenged the myth of ‘primitive’ polygamy in Paolo Mantegazza’s sexual science
9. Writing the man of politeness: the hidden importance of shame in eighteenth-century masculinity
10. ‘At nature’s mighty feast there is no vacant cover for him’: suicide, masculine shame and the language of burden in nineteenth-century Britain
11. ‘Sadistic, grinning rifle-women’: gender, emotions and politics in representations of militant leftist women
Index
About This Text
Part II
POWER AND PLACE-
MAKING: CLASS, HYGIE
NE AND RACE IN THE B
RITISH EMPIRE
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Chapter 5 White pride, male anger and the shame of poverty: gendered emotions and the construction of white working-class identity in interwar Southern Rhodesia
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