Gunpowder Masculinity and Warfare in German Texts 1400-1700
English

About The Book

<p>Guns have been linked with masculinity since their earliest days on European battlefields and surviving treatises on gunpowder from the early fifteenth century describe in detail the kinds of strong sober and God-fearing men who could be trusted to use this new weapon. As the destructive capacity and military tactical value of gunpowder became more evident to European peoples over time writers--especially German ones--expressed increasing anxiety about the disruptive potential that gunpowder weapons held for warrior masculinity martial ethics and the aesthetic traditions of war stories.<br /><br />Focused on early modern German texts of all kinds including military manuals poems theological treatises novels and broadsheets Gunpowder Masculinity and Warfare in German Texts 1400-1700 traces the cultural and literary history of gunpowder in German-speaking lands from the Hussite Wars into the literary aftermath of the Thirty Years War. Taking a long view of this textual and material history author Patrick Brugh reveals that early conversations about firearms resonate with those today including such topics as questions of masculine ethos and gun violence the rights to self-defense and to bear arms and the way new technologies change how we tell stories.<br /><br />PATRICK BRUGH is an administrator and affiliate assistant professor of German and gender studies at Loyola University Maryland.</p>
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