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Notes on Contributors
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Foreword vii
- Abbreviations ix
- Introduction 1
-
PART I. The Theory and Practice of Associational Life
- 1 Politeness, Sociability, and the “Little Platoon”: Associational Theory in the Scottish Enlightenment 33
- 2 Buildings, Associations, and Culture in the Scottish Provincial Town, c. 1700–1830 49
-
PART II. Professional Men and Their Societies
- 3 Medical Societies and the Scottish Enlightenment 69
- 4 Professors, Merchants, and Ministers in the Clubs of Eighteenth-Century Glasgow 85
-
PART III. Clubs, Societies, and Literary Culture
- 5 “Soaping” and “Shaving” the Public Sphere: James Boswell’s “Soaping Club” and Edinburgh Enlightenment Sociability 103
- 6 The “Bohemian Club”: A Study of Edinburgh’s Cape Club 127
- 7 “Caledonia’s Bard, Brother Burns”: Robert Burns and Scottish Freemasonry 143
- 8 Inventing the Public Sphere: Fictional Club Life in Ireland and Scotland 161
-
PART IV. Gender and Associational Culture
- 9 Achieving Manhood in Associational Culture: Student Societies and Masculinity in Enlightenment Edinburgh 191
- 10 Women’s Associations in Scotland, 1790–1830 206
- Acknowledgments 229
- Bibliography 231
- Notes on Contributors 257
- Index 261
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Foreword vii
- Abbreviations ix
- Introduction 1
-
PART I. The Theory and Practice of Associational Life
- 1 Politeness, Sociability, and the “Little Platoon”: Associational Theory in the Scottish Enlightenment 33
- 2 Buildings, Associations, and Culture in the Scottish Provincial Town, c. 1700–1830 49
-
PART II. Professional Men and Their Societies
- 3 Medical Societies and the Scottish Enlightenment 69
- 4 Professors, Merchants, and Ministers in the Clubs of Eighteenth-Century Glasgow 85
-
PART III. Clubs, Societies, and Literary Culture
- 5 “Soaping” and “Shaving” the Public Sphere: James Boswell’s “Soaping Club” and Edinburgh Enlightenment Sociability 103
- 6 The “Bohemian Club”: A Study of Edinburgh’s Cape Club 127
- 7 “Caledonia’s Bard, Brother Burns”: Robert Burns and Scottish Freemasonry 143
- 8 Inventing the Public Sphere: Fictional Club Life in Ireland and Scotland 161
-
PART IV. Gender and Associational Culture
- 9 Achieving Manhood in Associational Culture: Student Societies and Masculinity in Enlightenment Edinburgh 191
- 10 Women’s Associations in Scotland, 1790–1830 206
- Acknowledgments 229
- Bibliography 231
- Notes on Contributors 257
- Index 261