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Bathed in blood : hunting and mastery in the Old South / Nicolas W. Proctor.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Charlottesville, VA : University Press of Virginia, 2002.Description: 1 online resource (xi, 220 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780813921747
  • 0813921740
  • 1283579235
  • 9781283579230
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Bathed in blood.DDC classification:
  • 799.2975 21
LOC classification:
  • SK14 .P76 2002eb
Other classification:
  • NP 6020
Online resources:
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: 1. Game, Landscape, and the Law -- 2. Hunters at Home and in the Field -- 3. Hunting and the Masculine Ideal -- 4. Finding Peers: The Criteria of Exclusion -- 5. Community of the Hunt -- 6. Slavery, Paternalism, and the Hunt -- 7. Slave Perceptions of the Hunt.
Summary: "A widely recognized symbol, both at the time and in legend, of the antebellum slaveholding class's aristocratic pretensions, the hunt is obviously deserving of study. In Bathed in Blood, however, Nicolas Proctor makes an excellent case for the cultural and social significance of hunting for all classes and races of antebellum Southern men. He effectively demonstrates that the pursuit of game lay at the confluence of almost all of the key signifiers of masculinity in both white and black culture. Proctor's is the most detailed account and sustained analysis we have of hunting in the Old South. It involves a sophisticated (but, mercifully, mostly jargon-free) cultural analysis of a rich body of literature surrounding the hunt--sporting journal articles, travel accounts, private diaries and correspondence, WPA slave narratives, etc. But this is also a social, and especially in the first chapter an environmental, history of this subject. Proctor lays out the mechanics as well as the meaning of the hunt. In his pursuit of the forms, he never loses sight of the more utilitarian benefits of the hunt--meat and hides. While elite hunters who stressed the ideal rules of sport disdained 'pothunters' (those who hunted for subsistence), the tangible fruits of the hunt were far from irrelevant in their display of mastery. Throughout his account, Proctor carefully distinguishes between the ideal and the real, and pays them both due attention."--A review on H-Net.
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 197-215).

Machine generated contents note: 1. Game, Landscape, and the Law -- 2. Hunters at Home and in the Field -- 3. Hunting and the Masculine Ideal -- 4. Finding Peers: The Criteria of Exclusion -- 5. Community of the Hunt -- 6. Slavery, Paternalism, and the Hunt -- 7. Slave Perceptions of the Hunt.

"A widely recognized symbol, both at the time and in legend, of the antebellum slaveholding class's aristocratic pretensions, the hunt is obviously deserving of study. In Bathed in Blood, however, Nicolas Proctor makes an excellent case for the cultural and social significance of hunting for all classes and races of antebellum Southern men. He effectively demonstrates that the pursuit of game lay at the confluence of almost all of the key signifiers of masculinity in both white and black culture. Proctor's is the most detailed account and sustained analysis we have of hunting in the Old South. It involves a sophisticated (but, mercifully, mostly jargon-free) cultural analysis of a rich body of literature surrounding the hunt--sporting journal articles, travel accounts, private diaries and correspondence, WPA slave narratives, etc. But this is also a social, and especially in the first chapter an environmental, history of this subject. Proctor lays out the mechanics as well as the meaning of the hunt. In his pursuit of the forms, he never loses sight of the more utilitarian benefits of the hunt--meat and hides. While elite hunters who stressed the ideal rules of sport disdained 'pothunters' (those who hunted for subsistence), the tangible fruits of the hunt were far from irrelevant in their display of mastery. Throughout his account, Proctor carefully distinguishes between the ideal and the real, and pays them both due attention."--A review on H-Net.

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