Ben Jackson
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Conclusion
Making men
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The concluding chapter revisits the central themes identified in the introduction: gendered power, social distinction, material change, material interaction, and material experience. It argues that patriarchal power was materially constructed in two ways through goods’ design and aesthetics and through consumer material practices underpinned by the custom of coverture. It argues that social position was a powerful determiner of material and consumer practice, considering the goods indicative of social mobility, and that goods’ material characteristics were particularly useful to consumers in constructing classed identities. It also reflects on the changing design and aesthetics of the goods the book examines over the course of the century. The expansion of the ‘Great Male Renunciation’ theory undertaken here into a wider set of material practices beyond men’s sartorial choices thus positions men as drivers of design change over the period. The chapter closes by considering the author’s own material masculinity in the twenty-first century, highlighting the utility of the book’s regime of ‘material masculinities’ in contemporary contexts.

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Material masculinities

Men and goods in eighteenth-century England

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