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Householder
Furnishing the home
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Chapter 2 explores men’s and women’s curation and furnishing of the domestic interior through the administrative documents and order books of upholsterers Robert Williams of Bow Street in 1763 and James Brown of St Paul’s Churchyard in 1786. It combines the qualitative and quantitative approaches of previous studies of household consumption to reveal men’s significant investment in the furnishing of their homes as a key site of masculine identity and power. The chapter analyses men’s and women’s consumer strategies of furniture and furnishings – looking at order size, total spend, repeat custom, and whether they bought new, second-hand or repaired goods. It also provides a material analysis of objects’ design, materials, style, and finish. The combination of consumer and material approaches reveals the minutia of eighteenth-century consumers’ material preferences. From the data, a picture emerges of material identities materialised on socio-economic rather than gendered lines. Repairing was a universal practice of household furnishers and speaks to the need to materially maintain and upgrade identities regardless of gender or status. Men, this chapter reveals, were active, skilled, literate, and adventurous curators of their households by repairing goods, choosing upholstery, buying exotic wooden furniture, and making prudent consumer choices to furnish a key site of their masculinity. Exploring the householder as a material masculinity, not just as a position in the life course, demonstrates how his power, authority, discernment, and provision were materialised in specific and classed ways in the domestic interior.

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Material masculinities

Men and goods in eighteenth-century England

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