Abstract
This article is a study of merchant sailors in Bristol between 1850–1914. There is a stereotypical perception of the sailor as being a drunken, promiscuous, violent nuisance on the streets of a port town. This perception has been fashioned through popular imagery and imagination but also through an historiography that has largely investigated sailors in maritime and nautical contexts. Here I take a different approach and investigate one aspect of working-class culture, namely a man’s propensity for violence, in the context of Bristol’s urban, working-class culture. It will be argued that in their use of violence sailors were not the perceived breed apart but were an integrated presence in Bristol’s wider working-class culture. The reasons for violence, the methods used and the chosen victims of it were not the product of any maritime identity but were constructed from an urban one. Naturally, many sailors continued to display the stereotypical behavioural traits of sailors but there were also those who were aligned to a more respectable way of living. Cultural forces towards masculine respectability tempered some of sailors’ violent behaviours, as did the space available for violence, and consequently places sailors firmly within working-class culture.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Journal | Coastal Studies and Society |
Early online date | 9 May 2024 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Early online - 9 May 2024 |
Keywords
- sailor
- Bristol
- violence
- working class
- respectability
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davey-2024-obliged-in-self-defence-to-retaliate-violent-sailors-in-nineteenth-century-bristolFinal published version, 1.9 MBLicence: CC BY
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Davey, J. A. (2024). ‘Obliged in self-defence to retaliate’. Violent sailors in nineteenth-century Bristol. Coastal Studies and Society. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1177/26349817241252900
Davey, Jeremy Adam. / ‘Obliged in self-defence to retaliate’. Violent sailors in nineteenth-century Bristol. In: Coastal Studies and Society. 2024.
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abstract = "This article is a study of merchant sailors in Bristol between 1850–1914. There is a stereotypical perception of the sailor as being a drunken, promiscuous, violent nuisance on the streets of a port town. This perception has been fashioned through popular imagery and imagination but also through an historiography that has largely investigated sailors in maritime and nautical contexts. Here I take a different approach and investigate one aspect of working-class culture, namely a man{\textquoteright}s propensity for violence, in the context of Bristol{\textquoteright}s urban, working-class culture. It will be argued that in their use of violence sailors were not the perceived breed apart but were an integrated presence in Bristol{\textquoteright}s wider working-class culture. The reasons for violence, the methods used and the chosen victims of it were not the product of any maritime identity but were constructed from an urban one. Naturally, many sailors continued to display the stereotypical behavioural traits of sailors but there were also those who were aligned to a more respectable way of living. Cultural forces towards masculine respectability tempered some of sailors{\textquoteright} violent behaviours, as did the space available for violence, and consequently places sailors firmly within working-class culture.",
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Davey, JA 2024, '‘Obliged in self-defence to retaliate’. Violent sailors in nineteenth-century Bristol', Coastal Studies and Society. https://doi.org/10.1177/26349817241252900
‘Obliged in self-defence to retaliate’. Violent sailors in nineteenth-century Bristol. / Davey, Jeremy Adam.
In: Coastal Studies and Society, 09.05.2024.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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AU - Davey, Jeremy Adam
PY - 2024/5/9
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N2 - This article is a study of merchant sailors in Bristol between 1850–1914. There is a stereotypical perception of the sailor as being a drunken, promiscuous, violent nuisance on the streets of a port town. This perception has been fashioned through popular imagery and imagination but also through an historiography that has largely investigated sailors in maritime and nautical contexts. Here I take a different approach and investigate one aspect of working-class culture, namely a man’s propensity for violence, in the context of Bristol’s urban, working-class culture. It will be argued that in their use of violence sailors were not the perceived breed apart but were an integrated presence in Bristol’s wider working-class culture. The reasons for violence, the methods used and the chosen victims of it were not the product of any maritime identity but were constructed from an urban one. Naturally, many sailors continued to display the stereotypical behavioural traits of sailors but there were also those who were aligned to a more respectable way of living. Cultural forces towards masculine respectability tempered some of sailors’ violent behaviours, as did the space available for violence, and consequently places sailors firmly within working-class culture.
AB - This article is a study of merchant sailors in Bristol between 1850–1914. There is a stereotypical perception of the sailor as being a drunken, promiscuous, violent nuisance on the streets of a port town. This perception has been fashioned through popular imagery and imagination but also through an historiography that has largely investigated sailors in maritime and nautical contexts. Here I take a different approach and investigate one aspect of working-class culture, namely a man’s propensity for violence, in the context of Bristol’s urban, working-class culture. It will be argued that in their use of violence sailors were not the perceived breed apart but were an integrated presence in Bristol’s wider working-class culture. The reasons for violence, the methods used and the chosen victims of it were not the product of any maritime identity but were constructed from an urban one. Naturally, many sailors continued to display the stereotypical behavioural traits of sailors but there were also those who were aligned to a more respectable way of living. Cultural forces towards masculine respectability tempered some of sailors’ violent behaviours, as did the space available for violence, and consequently places sailors firmly within working-class culture.
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Davey JA. ‘Obliged in self-defence to retaliate’. Violent sailors in nineteenth-century Bristol. Coastal Studies and Society. 2024 May 9. Epub 2024 May 9. doi: 10.1177/26349817241252900