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Manly Smokes: Tobacco Consumption and the Construction of Identities in Industrial Montreal, 1888-1914
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Auteur/contributeur
- Rudy, Robert Jarrett (Auteur)
Titre
Manly Smokes: Tobacco Consumption and the Construction of Identities in Industrial Montreal, 1888-1914
Résumé
This dissertation explores the cultural practice of smoking and its connection to social relations from the beginning of cigarette mass production in Montreal in 1888 to the First World War. It uncovers the norms of smoking etiquette and taste, their roots in gender, class and race relations and their use in reproducing these power relationships. It argues that these prescriptions reflected and served to legitimize beliefs about inclusion, exclusion and hierarchy that were at the core of nineteenth century liberalism. Liberal ideals of self-control and rationality structured the ritual of smoking: from the purchase of tobacco; to who was to smoke; to how one was supposed to smoke; to where one smoked. These prescriptions served to normalize the exclusion of women from the definition of the liberal individual and to justify the subordination of the poor and cultural minorities. Furthermore, even while these prescriptions were at their height, an emergent group of beliefs began to recast notions of respectable smoking around new ideals of speed and ungendered universality. This challenge was not only part of the transition from bourgeois to mass consumption, it was the roots of a transformation of the liberal order in the years previous to the First World War.
Type
Thèse de doctorat (histoire)
Université
Université McGill
Date
2001
Nb de pages
vii, 234
Citer ce document
RUDY, Robert Jarrett. Manly Smokes: Tobacco Consumption and the Construction of Identities in Industrial Montreal, 1888-1914. Thèse de doctorat (histoire), Université McGill, 2001. vii, 234 p.
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