Brad Beaven
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Leisure in a sailortown
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This chapter advances discussion from the cultural anxieties that sailortown triggered to embark on the exploration of the subaltern communities that lived, worked, and were entertained on Ratcliffe Highway. In this chapter it will be argued that leisure institutions were important contact zones that fostered an international maritime–urban culture. Leisure institutions enabled both visiting and returning sailors a space in which maritime traditions and cultures were shared, transmitted, and reproduced. Thus, we will explore how the pubs and the dance and entertainment rooms fostered a maritime leisure culture that was a recognisable marker for international seafarers and local working people alike. Indeed, while acknowledging the dangers that lurked in sailortown, the chapter demonstrates that subaltern maritime communities could function effectively to equip sailors with the navigational skills to avoid entanglement with a criminal fraternity.

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The devil’s highway

Urban anxieties and subaltern cultures in London’s sailortown, c. 1850–1900.

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