Ben Jackson
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Gentleman sportsman
Collecting trophies
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Chapter 5 explores the consumption, maintenance, display, and use of hunting equipment and trophies to unearth the materiality of a particularly masculine pastime. The sportsman was an eighteenth-century consumer identity, and provincial and metropolitan manufacturers appealed to the rural hunter. The chapter examines gendered attitudes to country sports within men’s domestic material culture to demonstrate that guns were not divorced from the world of polite, luxury goods. The chapter examines elite men’s gun consumer behaviour, and their material preferences in gun decoration, over the course of the eighteenth century to demonstrate how elite men used luxury objects to construct both a polite and sporting gentlemanly identity that combined to make the ‘gentleman sportsman’. This chapter uses gunsmith bills and trade cards, extant guns, and household and probate inventories to examine the changing location and display of hunting equipment within the country house. Its examination of gunsmith bills and trade cards, extant guns, and household and probate inventories reveals the changing location and display of hunting equipment within the country house. Over the course of the century, guns were increasingly plainer in ornamentation and no longer graced the great halls of country houses but were displayed and stored in men’s private chambers; martial prowess was still present but was materialised through sporting guns and objects of polite scientific technology such as globes, barometers, and telescopes – reflecting the wider pacification of masculine pursuits in the period.

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Material masculinities

Men and goods in eighteenth-century England

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