Between 1850 and 1900, Ratcliffe Highway was the pulse of maritime London. Sailors from every corner of the globe found solace, and sometimes trouble, in this bustling district. However, for social investigators, it was a place of fascination and fear as it harboured chaotic and dangerous ‘exotic’ communities. Sailortowns were transient, cosmopolitan and working class in character and provide us with an insight into class, race and gendered relations. They were contact zones of heightened interaction where multi-ethnic subaltern cultures met, sometimes negotiated and at other times clashed with one another. The book argues that despite these challenges sailortown was a
distinctive and
functional working-class community that was self-regulating and self-moderating. The book uncovers a robust sailortown community in which an urban-maritime culture shaped a sense of themselves and the traditions and conventions that governed subaltern behaviour in the district.
表中的内容
Introduction: Seaports and sailortowns
1 The curse of Ratcliffe Highway: Its reputation and its people in the nineteenth Century
2 The imagined geography of Ratcliffe Highway
3 From jolly Jack and Moll to proletarian Jack and Jill: The depictions of sailors and women in a nineteenth century sailortown
4 Leisure in a sailortown
5 The inner world of the seafaring boarding house
6 Sex work and Ratcliffe Highway: brothels, crime, and matriarchal networks
7 Male violence, class and ethnicity in sailortown
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
关于作者
Brad Beaven is Principal Lecturer in History at the University of Portsmouth