Cold Steel, Weak Flesh: Mechanism, Masculinity and the Anxieties of Late Victorian Empire

冷钢,脆弱的肉体:机械、男性气质与维多利亚晚期帝国的焦虑

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Abstract

This article considers the reception and representation of advanced military technology in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Britain. It argues that technologies such as the breech-loading rifle and the machine gun existed in an ambiguous relationship with contemporary ideas about martial masculinities and in many cases served to fuel anxieties about the physical prowess of the British soldier. In turn, these anxieties encouraged a preoccupation in both military and popular domains with that most visceral of weapons, the bayonet, an obsession which was to have profound consequences for British military thinking at the dawn of the First World War.

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