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From the Dance Floor to the Rifle Range: The Evolution of Manliness in the National Guards, 1870-19171

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 November 2010

Eleanor L. Hannah
Affiliation:
University of Minnesota, Duluth

Extract

From 1870 through 1900, the National Guard attracted tens of thousands of new members by offering men the opportunity to demonstrate that they were manly men who held dramatic civic roles that put them at the center of community social and patriotic life. Time, modernization, strike service, changes in technology, and warfare all worked to alter the environment in which Guardsmen made themselves men. Guardsmen of the early twentieth century no longer found their definition of manhood and citizenship in performances for the local community. By 1917, the elements of manhood National Guardsmen shared had evolved from the focus on style and sociability they celebrated the 1880s and 1890s into an individual focus on a concept of self-discipline, self-improvement, and national patriotism. The National Guard offers historians the opportunity to see how an organization that emphasized making men manly was able to shift what that meant as definitions of manhood evolved and as the Guard worked to keep its appeal current and fresh to each new batch of recruits.

Type
Essays
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Historians of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 2007

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References

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