Men on trial: Performing emotion, embodiment and identity in Ireland, 1800-45

Men on trial: Performing emotion, embodiment and identity in Ireland, 1800-45

by Katie Barclay
Men on trial: Performing emotion, embodiment and identity in Ireland, 1800-45

Men on trial: Performing emotion, embodiment and identity in Ireland, 1800-45

by Katie Barclay

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Overview

Men on trial explores how the Irish perform ‘the self’ within the early nineteenth-century courtroom and its implications for law, society and nation. Drawing on new methodologies from the history of emotion, as well as theories of performativity and performative space, it emphasises that manliness was not simply a cultural ideal, but something practised, felt and embodied. Men on trial explores how gender could be a creative dynamic in productions of power. Targeted at scholars in Irish history, law and gender studies, this book argues that justice was not simply determined through weighing evidence, but through weighing men, their bodies, behaviours, and emotions. Moreover, in a context where the processes of justice were publicised in the press for the nation and the world, manliness and its role in the creation of justice became implicated in the making of national identity.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781526163646
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Publication date: 03/30/2022
Series: Gender in History
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 5.43(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.63(d)

About the Author

Katie Barclay is an Associate Professor in the ARC Centre for Excellence in the History of Emotions and Department of History, University of Adelaide

Table of Contents

Opening speeches: an introduction
1. Law and lawyers: ‘the prerogative of the wig’
2. The stage: ‘the court presented a very imposing spectacle’
3. Bodies in court: ‘Hogarth would have admired him forever’
4. Speech, sympathy and eloquence: ‘it is a voice full of manly melody’
5. The cross-examination: ‘he’s putting me in such a doldrum’
6. Storytelling: ‘quoting the poet’
7. On character: ‘you see McDonnell the value of a good character’
Closing arguments: a conclusion
Select Bibliography
Index

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