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Det Blänkande Eländet. En bok om Kronprinsens husarer i sekelskiftets Malmö

Sörensen, Thomas LU (1997)
Abstract
"The Glittering Misery" has treated certain aspects of Swedish society during the decades around the turn of the 19th Century. The enlisted men of the Crown Prince´s Hussar Regiment in Malmö have been utilised as a means by which to analyse society at this point in time. Questions which have been answered are: who the hussars were and what sort of life did they lead? What form did the relationships between hussars take, as well as those with the town´s folk? And, not least of all, what was the concept behind actually being a hussar? One of the main aims of this investigation has been to make a more general commentary on the Male Ideal, as it was then perceived, through a consideration of the hussar´s behavioural patterns. Service in the... (More)
"The Glittering Misery" has treated certain aspects of Swedish society during the decades around the turn of the 19th Century. The enlisted men of the Crown Prince´s Hussar Regiment in Malmö have been utilised as a means by which to analyse society at this point in time. Questions which have been answered are: who the hussars were and what sort of life did they lead? What form did the relationships between hussars take, as well as those with the town´s folk? And, not least of all, what was the concept behind actually being a hussar? One of the main aims of this investigation has been to make a more general commentary on the Male Ideal, as it was then perceived, through a consideration of the hussar´s behavioural patterns. Service in the hussars must always be seen in relation to those alternatives which were available to a young member of the proletariat. A proportion undoubtedly had it better as a hussar than they would have had earlier. But for others service was probably a bitter disappointment. For the majority time spent in the regiment was most likely just another experience in a hard proletarian life. It is possible that the experience of being a hussar came to influence and strengthen, for some even create, their male identity. For it was just here in the barracks that a male ideal was constructed. This ideal most likely permeated even through other groups of workers, but in the barracks it was cultivated and put on a pinnacle. It is evident that the male ideal, which existed among other proletarian groups - for example among the dock workers, seamen and railway workers - was strengthened and clarified in the barracks. Among other ways, the hussars found an expression for their masculinity - that is to say, made their declaration of being real men - by pointedly demarcating themselves from the behavioural patterns of women. This was done by aid of behavioural traits and habits well and truly divorced from feminine ones - for example; through tattooing and tobacco consumption; through the use of vulgar language; and by attaching a romance to both drinking and fighting. To a high degree it was through the relationships towards one´s hussar comrades that the identity as a man was constructed. A conclusion can therefore be drawn that manliness was created through relationships to other men - specifically to men in one´s own group - and not only to women and male outsiders. So, for example, bullying became a means by which to confirm one´s own identity. The regiment´s activities also contributed to how the male identity expressed itself. As a preparation for the demands and pressures of war, all enlisted personnel had to be toughened up. Therefore self-control and grace unnder pressure became the perhaps most important aspects to the turn of the century´s military male ideal. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
supervisor
opponent
  • Docent Norman, Hans, Uppsala
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Contemporary history (circa 1800 to 1914), Modern historia (ca. 1800-1914)
pages
222 pages
publisher
Thomas Sörensen, Roslins väg 14B, 217 55 Malmö, Sweden
defense location
Department of History, Lund, sal 3.
defense date
1998-01-24 10:15:00
external identifiers
  • other:ISRN: LUHFDA/HFHI-1998/1081-SE222
ISBN
91-628-2622-0
language
Swedish
LU publication?
yes
id
2b6f6638-4855-435b-a5e1-3c128a81f598 (old id 18266)
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 10:27:55
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:58:54
@phdthesis{2b6f6638-4855-435b-a5e1-3c128a81f598,
  abstract     = {{"The Glittering Misery" has treated certain aspects of Swedish society during the decades around the turn of the 19th Century. The enlisted men of the Crown Prince´s Hussar Regiment in Malmö have been utilised as a means by which to analyse society at this point in time. Questions which have been answered are: who the hussars were and what sort of life did they lead? What form did the relationships between hussars take, as well as those with the town´s folk? And, not least of all, what was the concept behind actually being a hussar? One of the main aims of this investigation has been to make a more general commentary on the Male Ideal, as it was then perceived, through a consideration of the hussar´s behavioural patterns. Service in the hussars must always be seen in relation to those alternatives which were available to a young member of the proletariat. A proportion undoubtedly had it better as a hussar than they would have had earlier. But for others service was probably a bitter disappointment. For the majority time spent in the regiment was most likely just another experience in a hard proletarian life. It is possible that the experience of being a hussar came to influence and strengthen, for some even create, their male identity. For it was just here in the barracks that a male ideal was constructed. This ideal most likely permeated even through other groups of workers, but in the barracks it was cultivated and put on a pinnacle. It is evident that the male ideal, which existed among other proletarian groups - for example among the dock workers, seamen and railway workers - was strengthened and clarified in the barracks. Among other ways, the hussars found an expression for their masculinity - that is to say, made their declaration of being real men - by pointedly demarcating themselves from the behavioural patterns of women. This was done by aid of behavioural traits and habits well and truly divorced from feminine ones - for example; through tattooing and tobacco consumption; through the use of vulgar language; and by attaching a romance to both drinking and fighting. To a high degree it was through the relationships towards one´s hussar comrades that the identity as a man was constructed. A conclusion can therefore be drawn that manliness was created through relationships to other men - specifically to men in one´s own group - and not only to women and male outsiders. So, for example, bullying became a means by which to confirm one´s own identity. The regiment´s activities also contributed to how the male identity expressed itself. As a preparation for the demands and pressures of war, all enlisted personnel had to be toughened up. Therefore self-control and grace unnder pressure became the perhaps most important aspects to the turn of the century´s military male ideal.}},
  author       = {{Sörensen, Thomas}},
  isbn         = {{91-628-2622-0}},
  keywords     = {{Contemporary history (circa 1800 to 1914); Modern historia (ca. 1800-1914)}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  publisher    = {{Thomas Sörensen, Roslins väg 14B, 217 55 Malmö, Sweden}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  title        = {{Det Blänkande Eländet. En bok om Kronprinsens husarer i sekelskiftets Malmö}},
  year         = {{1997}},
}