1st Edition

Disreputable Pleasures Less Virtuous Victorians at Play

Edited By Mike Huggins, J A Mangan Copyright 2004
272 Pages
by Routledge

272 Pages
by Routledge

272 Pages
by Routledge

Many historians have claimed that respectability was the sharpest line of social division in Victorian society, even that the line between the 'respectable' and 'unrespectable' was more significant than between rich and poor. This irreverent and revisionist collection argues that they have over-polarised Victorian attitudes and challenges the conventional view that middle-class Victorian leisure... Read more
List of illustrations, List of tables, Prologue: All mere complexities, Part 1: The privileged pursuit of dubious pleasures, Part 2: The power of print: the media and respectability, Part 3: Vice, violence and virility across Victorian Britain, Epilogue: The dogs bark but the caravan moves on, Notes, Select bibliography, Index

Biography

Mike Huggins is former head of postgraduate teacher training at Lancaster University, now retired. Now a sports history writer and researcher, he lectures at St. Martin's College, Lancaster. He is also the author of Flat Racing and British Society, 1790-1914: A Social and Economic History, which won the prestigious North American Society for Sports History Prize for sports history book of the year in 2001.
J.A. Mangan is former Director of the International Research Centre for Sport, Socialisation and Society at the University of Strathclyde, UK. He was founding Chairman of the British Society of Sports History and founding editor of The International Journal of the History of Sport.