Brad Beaven
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Male violence, class, and ethnicity in sailortown
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This chapter challenges the notion that Ratcliffe Highway was overrun with an anarchic lawlessness. The fear that foreign sailors had introduced a dangerous knife culture into port cities had, by the late nineteenth century, fed into a wider anxiety about race in Britain. By the 1880s, there was an increasing acceptance of scientific racism in wider society and a perception that ‘Englishness’ was being eroded by alien settlers with their own languages, customs, and religions. This final chapter demonstrates that despite the sensational press stoking fears of knife-wielding foreign sailors, there were relatively few serious acts of violence that went before the Old Bailey during this period. Indeed, it is argued that sailortown’s important role as a contact zone often mitigated against extreme incidents of violence as male aggression was relatively self-regulated through recognised fighting customs. British and foreign sailors proved adept in recognising the different customs of upholding masculinity in densely populated working-class districts and, in some cases, aligned themselves with the local working-class population in opposing the police.

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The devil’s highway

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

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