Petticoat Heroes
Gender, Culture and Popular Protest in the Rebecca Riots
9781783167883
Distributed for University of Wales Press
Petticoat Heroes
Gender, Culture and Popular Protest in the Rebecca Riots
The wave of unrest which took place in the 1840s in Wales known as “the Rebecca riots” stands out as a success story within the generally gloomy annals of popular struggle and defeat: farmers and workers, outlandishly dressed in bonnets and petticoats, showed their outrage against unfair taxes by attacking tollgates and other symbols of perceived injustice. Petticoat Heroes draws on the fields of cultural history, gender studies, and anthropology to present fresh and alternative arguments on the meaning of Rebeccaite costume and ritual, the significance of the feminine in protest, and the links between protest and popular culture. An epilogue discusses the Rebecca riots in the context of the contemporary resurgence of leaderless protest around the world including the Occupy and Anonymous movements.
Reviews
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction
2. ‘Everything conspires to disorder’: Politics and Society in Rebecca’s Country
3. Rebecca and the Historian
4. ‘Pomp’ and paraphernalia’: Custom, Festival, Ritual and Rebeccaism
5. ‘Petticoat heroes’: Rethinking Rebeccaite Costume and Symbolism
6. ‘Six hundred children and more every day’: The New Poor Law and Female Sexual Agency
7. ‘Maid, spirit or man’: Rebecca’s Image in Public Discourse
8. ‘A very creditable portion of Welsh history’? Rebeccaism’s Aftermath and Longer-Term Political and Cultural Impact
Conclusion
Epilogue. ‘The rallying-cry of discontent’: Repurposing Rebecca
Notes
Bibliography
1. Introduction
2. ‘Everything conspires to disorder’: Politics and Society in Rebecca’s Country
3. Rebecca and the Historian
4. ‘Pomp’ and paraphernalia’: Custom, Festival, Ritual and Rebeccaism
5. ‘Petticoat heroes’: Rethinking Rebeccaite Costume and Symbolism
6. ‘Six hundred children and more every day’: The New Poor Law and Female Sexual Agency
7. ‘Maid, spirit or man’: Rebecca’s Image in Public Discourse
8. ‘A very creditable portion of Welsh history’? Rebeccaism’s Aftermath and Longer-Term Political and Cultural Impact
Conclusion
Epilogue. ‘The rallying-cry of discontent’: Repurposing Rebecca
Notes
Bibliography
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