Improving the Inside: Gender, Property and the 18th-Century Self |
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Authors: | Laura Brace |
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Affiliation: | Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Leicester, UK |
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Abstract: | This article looks at questions of politeness, conduct and civility in the 18th century to explore how individuals imagined owning themselves as market actors and as members of an emerging civil society. It focuses on how they managed the contradictions of participating in the capitalist market without being branded as gamblers. It argues that a moral economy of rational improvement and a disciplined self was crucial to this process, to counter the fragility of self-ownership and the unpredictability and riskiness of property not based on land ownership. This disciplined and rational self-ownership was inextricable from the development of gender relations, which rested on the division between the public and private spheres, and from the disavowal of 'bad femininity' from the account of property. |
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Keywords: | politeness self-ownership credit gender |
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