Bare-Knuckle Boxing and the Pedagogy of National Manhood
Transcription
Bare-Knuckle Boxing and the Pedagogy of National Manhood
Bare-Knuckle Boxing and the Pedagogy of National Manhood Reflecting onthe elusiveness ofboxing as an object ofcritical scrutiny, Norman Mailer once remarked that "to ty to leam from boxers [is] a quintessentially comic quest. Boxers are liars. . . . once you knew what they thought, you could hit them. so their personalities become masterpieces ofconcealment" (43). Despite this belated caution, the drama inside the ring has long exhibited an almost allegorical power formen and women ofletters eager to find cultural meaning in such a concenfated tial ofthe will. For instance, in william cobbett's 1805 essay, "In Defense of Boxing," published in the weekly Political Register ontheoccasion ofa coroner's decision "wherein death was the consequence of a boxingmatch," the persistent cries to "eradicate the practice ofboxing,, compel cobbett to summon what he saw as a more debilitating cultural spectre: England's steady fall into effemin acy (172).He begins by valorizing the pugilistic arts as a civil means of settling quarrels in a frequently uncivil society, particularly in contradistinction to the decidedly craven swordplay ofthe French and Italians. For cobbett, the issue at stake appears patently simple: "[w]e must either have cuttings and stabbings, or boxingl';however, as he continues, it becomes clear that the ramifications of this choice are fartherreaching: "[F]or, much as I abhor cuttings and stab- ilruu) rDrudod ul salprus -odJo so3€,ll. erll pue seAIlBSoJoJd 1e.rq1nc ereq r ecuds e 'ereqds c11qnd f-n4uec-qluaoloulu eq1;o gud e^Iln1llsuoc e se suoqcuru: Surxoq'uo4e1p -eruJo srruoJ snolued erou'reqlogo ,.r(coJces pue sser4emb,, eql e>llun '8uu eqtgo (6sseu-cllqn4, eqt o1,(pualsrsur suJqeJ $oqqoJ esneceq osle 6oJII lnq Iecllqod olur sesselc re^\ol otluo uoqcnpul etp q lueEe yg:e,rod e se Eurxoq eluqls JopJe ueclyqnde; pue serqledrur(s sselc-3trqro./y\ s6Joqlne eql esneceq uud ut 'e,rrlcn4sut st uods eql roJ erSolode s6lleqqo3 ' eqt ut Pensrnd t1.).,ryep Eurlses;o opolu Jleql Gt-g sseccnsJo ecueqc lseleer8 eql qll,l\ l€g Sursss ' ' ' ,(ce;ces pue sset4emb sI uouceJsllus rog drqqerru e ,(luusseceu sI eJeql sJe -uosrodpue sJeqqsls pue sJegnc ]s8uoue seeJoLI,,\\ lscuspuedepulJo eepl euros 'eldoed eq1;o lser*ro1 eql ls8uorue ue,re 'e,rqe dee1o1 'goqs ut 'pue1 .(sq1 Inoqel ruo4: uoqexuloJ }uoISuE4e uolsecco 'ereqds s1t ul qcee'r(eql iqfue4s ,firooqlo $uegodun erpgo usru purual ol e res .&q1 ipootltpreq;o suoqouJo uorlecrunuruoc u ocnpoJd,fuql :p1oq eydoed eql o{uru o} pue} ,(sq1 leydoed oquo se8eyquresse o1 esu errr8 seqcleu Eurxoq lng,, :elcel -ceds crlqnd qEnorql uorlecglluepl sselc setlceot teqt.(Eo8eped lecrper Jo ruroJ u se SurlqEg -ezud seut8euter ueqqoJ '(ZtD 66sel4unoc Jeqlo IIeJo esoql luo4 peqsrnSurlslp ueeq'seEe ro3: 'sleq puelEug;o sldoed eql qcrqm,(q epoul e 'sldoed uoururoc eql uee^Ueq qerrenb Eu4uuuue] Jo epotu snoreueE 1eql,, q er1 sur8uo s.uods eql eHIl&'senlel IeJrulnc cruorue8eqgo uoqerluelsur eql pue sJepJoq IeuoqeuJo Eurprar8eses ,&elqrur eql ftnpqcrn .,'repto rsq8rq ego .fte,rerqJo speep,, JoJ ecnop crur,(uopu e se gods aqlgo uo4em8g e o1,(e,l se,,u8 (.(peu 'pe1g1ds 'eueumq se) eles u1(o slr;og Surxoq;o esueJep s6ltreqqoJ e;ag '(911) ,,Euus3;ns f,Ipoq ssel q tueql ur pe8e8us suosred sqtr Eursodxe pue qfue4s.(1tpoq ssel Suurnber esoql ol sasrcJexe ro sgods ,(preq pue olloFp€ urog eEueqc e ursuoc os sr euou r(armutffi 1o suroldur,(s eqlJo 1sse"6ord sqtJo ued eql sr prder moq.&s ueql pue 'ge; rreql ur sele]s eql oce.tt o1 'drolstq su Jo11el olul {ool o1 'reprsuoc o} repuer erl} 8eq l pue lqrmog erfl ur ere ol11 'uo4ep -ur8sp luuorl€uJo sa8qs eql eJB eseql :,{.re,reyg'ecrpretro3',(ceunuegg '[mm1'ecuepdg'ecrsuuro3'e1o,( rfrarog € o] uorssluqnsJo eilenoT{qe el€q I 'sEmq roleo.r8 14s e 'enuq ueurr(.4unoc r(urJo sJorllo lsour edoq 1 sB le8uenl 76 a Bare-Knuckle Boxing and the pedagogy of National Manhood 93 litical participation are articulated by and communicated throughout the masses. what makes this particularly ironic is the fact that boxing had been illegal in Britain since 1750, which suggests that the culture of the ring (known at the time as "the fancy'') exposes the tension between state mandate and the efficacy ofpotential counterpublics, discursive arenas where heterogeneous groups can band and form alternative and even illicit social strategies and practices. As boxing historian Elliott Gorn asserts, the fancy represents a "hybrid culture" (29), a mobile public sphere that bracketed difference in the service of common interests, an incongruous feature of a sport grounded in combat. In orderto suggestways in which the culture ofthe ring is complicitwiththe mechanisms ofnational identity formation and the "recuperation" ofmasculinist ideals, I want to first map out the discursive politics ofthe fancy, and then interrogate the representation of a single bare-knuckle bout, the fight between Thomas Hickman (alias "The Gaslight Man") and Bill Neate at Hungerford-atBerkshire on December 1 1, 1821. The Hickman-Neate contest is certainlynotthe most culturalty significant fight ofthe bare-knuckle heyday in England, nor is itnotabre as a demonstation ofpugilistic excellence (Neate stopped Hiclanan after eighteen bloody rounds), but it is an event that captivated the popular imagination, with over 25,000 spectators in attendance, and yielded surprising literary capital, most stikingly in william H azlitt's 1 822 essay "The Fight." More importantly however, the Hickman-Neate bout, understood through the competing "styles" of masculine performance assumed by the two pugilists, allows us to consider how ttre brutality of early boxing symbolically stages the concomitant violence intrinsic to both nation and gender formation. Both are products ofthe exigencies ofdisavowal and repudiation, and the logic ofnineteenth-century sport similarly hinges on the promise that "the better man wins," so much so that at times the outcome of a match is presumed to underwrite certain racial and culfural stereotypes. Intriguingly, the authenticity (and thus the narrativization) ofthe HickmanNeate bout is threatened by suspicions of a "cross,,, or fixed outcome, suggesting that the contest between the crude, outlandish Hickman and 25. j April 2003 -uoc sr affitru) n)lndod ut satpn$ dlquepr leuo,€u qsrTBuAJo .&e1ue3,ftryuec-qlueoloup Jr?:ffil uodn uo4elrlrqeqeJ elfluJo asJnocsrp,fiopsuedtuoc e slueserder-egenb -pa ,(peureytue8 pue f4pcrs,(qd lrcrgo selup Eu4eduroc eq] erenbs rrroq -euos 1sruu leq euHJoq seEreure 1eq1 1cefqns oupcseur,(relduexe aq1 'rvroleq lnoq etreeN-u€uDlclH equo uolssncslp eql ut eroydxe I sY 'pJoc -srp yec411od uro4 Eu4psor errrner1 Iecyolsg eq1 q8raru.relunoc.(11u4ue1od ,(poq eleu crlelqtrE equo slunocce pue se8eut oq1.&\oq s1se33ns ..'edor -ng ur us1€uorleuJo e8u eq1, qlec uosrepuv lclpaueg ]eq^\go SuruulEeq erll se llellr sB'('c1e 'sseuperu s.ilI eEroeg'otcessel4l oolJelod eql'srezn cuoelode5l eq] Eurpnlcur) puelEug ur etoue.led pren8reer pue ereJff^Uo qrrrr seprcuroc Suxoq eplcruDl-er€qgo ffi1eq sry lutLl 'uoqecg4 poued e -uepr repueE pue sselcJo setEele4s leuoqelueserdar eqtr Eursodurocer roJ po^JaseJ pue 'cqqnd luerre oql eperu ot{,/y\ s.tolulcads Euruleel eq1 fq pelea -q1ep ,!1ec1s.(qd ',{prcos alqlssluued;o sreproq aq} uo pepn4suoc ,lpseq eere ue ,(11ers1r1 serrr 3uu oql elur] s (lITZeH ul JoJ ?olJed eql rmtrlr1| sc4tTod IBunurTJo elrs u se EuF Surxoq eql eurEeurr o11ryssn sdeqred st 11 '3ut11e1 -poolqJo cr1sq6ee ue sslouord pue ecuelorl prmoq-elru srouoq 1eql I€epl etnlncseru reyncepeds e suuoyed Surxoq eplcruDl-ereq',filueE pepuel eql ,(q pezruo4ed 1e,(.(3re1c tsrpoqlantr pue yecqeEue,rg .(q peucep '(pe1ce1 -ord,(ylrcel uerre pue) pelncesord,(1erur 1e.( 1e8e1p :oJrulnc Surgodsgo uoqsprlosuoc snp ur uorilsod uegecun ue serdncco usqr8nd,,tryueo rlluee1 -euru eqlJoJleq tsnJ eql q 'soqle cr13II13 Iooqcs clqnd eJo esu eqt puB 'uoqeuodsue4Jo spoq1etu peztuepotu'uorlezrlel4snpur sseru,(q petreeJc eruocur eyqesodsrp pue errrrJ IeuoqeeJceJJo suorldscuoc So1gqs 'euerE(q pue qlleeqJo sllnc meu,(q,(ysnoeuellrums psdeqs 'e8e uetprerrrpg pue ueuopr^ erpJo 66uorlue^ur" eql r(Fee1c sr-1eqo13 ptse',peztletcJeruruoc 'pegrpoc 'pezyte?lo-f,epo1lr ,&\ou>I e,{\ se sgodsgo eJnllnc egJ 's1rrolloJ 1€ry{\Jo snooJ eql sr-errusodun ro sseupelducs(erd; elqrssod s1r 'reqlo eql uo pue 'ec4cerd Ierrulnc uepel -Eurueeur e su Euxoq'puuq euo uo-uorlducsut elqnop sql 'turuocep fpeurepueS eqt euqncs€ruJo Brrrerpoloru 3 e{q sploJm,(11epue1od e1ue51 leEuenl 76 Bare-Knuckle Boxing and the pedagogy of National Manhood 95 George Mosse' s pioneering w ork N at i on alis m and S exu al i ty first explored the dual histories ofnational and sexual identity, positing that the formation ofnationalism in modem Europe is complicit with the idealization ofmiddle-class masculinity maintained by a newly codified bourgeois "respectability." citing the coterminous emergence ofnationalistic ideology, new cultural regimes of sexual conduct, and the revalorization of male beauty born ofthe eighteenth-century Greek revival, Mosse charts the way in which these discourses not only came to mutually reinforce each other, but also how, given that nationality and gender are relational terms having meaning onlywithin a differential system ofsignification, they together demarcate the figurative boundaries ofthe patriotic body by stig- matizing the masturbator, homosexual, immigrant, and Jew (among others) as examples ofa weak and undisciplined masculinity. Mosse's work is useful in that it brings into reliefthe gendered implications implicit in Benedict Anderson's understanding ofnation as "a deep, horizontal comradeship," an imagined "fratemi ty" orguized and policed by what Mosse calls "respectability" (qtd. in Anderson 7). Sublimating libidinal energy into the "higherpurpose" ofnationalism and "projecting a stereotype of human beauty which supposedly transcend[s] sensuousness," according to Mosse (1 1), male propriety simultaneously deepens the identification with the state while "exorcising a homoeroticism" that might otherwise jeopardize "the history of [male] friendship" (16). As the example from cobbett intimates, bare-knuckle boxing is imagined as an antidote to creeping cultural effeminacyby offering a space where masculine competency can be (over)determined, and thus, having co-opted nationalistic strategies of self-representation, the ring and its patrons function as a microcosm ofthe national "fratemity." Therefore, the boxing ring in the early nineteenth century can be viewed as a critical site for staging the destruction, reorganization, and. recuperability ofthe masculine body. Unlike contemporary prize-fighting, bare-knuckle bouts determine the limits ofraw physical being: stripped to the waist in the open air and fighting without the protection of gloves, mouthpiece or referee, the early modem pugilist fought rounds measured 25.3 April 2003 amtp) fipdod ut saryn$ leql uosu?dtuoc E ..'SutxogJo ecuc€Jd Isuolleu ptru,{ueul eq1, Eutsser4llv\ ol..seEenEuel peep pue porrJeel,,go dprus eql soruduoc ue8g eEessed SurTIet euo ur 'ecuelsur JoJ :uorl€cnpe yecrlgyodgo pUDI B JoJ IuruoJ B s€ 3uu eql sees ueEg '$eqqoJ e{I'I 'uoqecglflsJo sopou pIrB 'seueptmoq 'spn1u'se1ru rrlro sil qll,lr rtlnrnururoc xeldruoc e se rfuue; sq1 Euqcn4suoc '1s1uarcs I€nos eJo '&pupelqo eqlouJl 'ro8p eql qtrm Etnxoqgo ern{nc eql serpnls ueEg 'pouedrue.(-dgg e relo 1IIEU luscgtu8ts,fte,ro.(peeu 6selJenllqo s6Jexoq'suodorreded Jo sllmocce molq-,(q-Aolq sB IIea s€ -srvrou r{rerodure}uoc'sluuqc puu s8uos repdod'qpqpueq Eutcnporder'ete -ureqde SurxoqJo rrmrpueduoc u su selJes Eulop os ut pue '(E :D..elqls -sod su ocueJeJeJJo {ooq € elelduroc se,, eq o1 sartdse DuDlxog'ss8ed puesnoql o^! re^o }v 'gzg I ul eumlo^ Ieug prrB rluu eql 'zI8I ut ,fsnour -,(uoue peqsqqnd w.& qcrq Uo erunlol lsrg eql 'wsry8n4 utapoy[ puD TuauuV lo saqqqs ',to lDuntxog s.ueEg ecJold 'ryolrt crpedolc,(cue 1nq'culuecce uego 'el8urs u ol o,l\o errr rftnluec qlueeleulu,(puo eql ut Euu eqlgo suo4cnpord ellsJnoslp eql lnoqe ,,!\oIDI e,l\ letl,/yuo qcn6 lusqeuoueupaqdsul -etrelsJo fuous8eq u,nrop do1eql ol olrletuelye u,tteq-,(lqEnor e qsttrlrg o1[rrr eurlncseluJo se1,!s eseql 'elcelceds e,runuud ur sre,fuql su pelceua 'rroleq ruelc seuoceq sV '(U ' e),pe1prr ,(1ry 1ou sr pq1 ftmnou stn€luoc trI'lueplcc€ 11u o1 ;ouedns',(y1eept,, st Suxoq ro; ..'eydls sl ile,,'ecuelolt sIJo sseusnorcuduc eqt pue Euu erpJo suo4ueluoc eql uee $eq 'Eursaqd s6seleo IoJ33 ec,(o1^.ouoq oJ 'elru o1ecuecsernbce srelsfeJ 1I elq/!t. ecueyon Supruryrer'ec4cerd lerqpc snonsuoc-Jles u o{{ splogrm Surxoq 'prmor r{oee rege sppo 8uryaq erpJo uor}erqllecer erl} pue qcl€rcs eql 1e Eurpuuls relqEg qcue .(q peumssu samlsod pezrldls eq1 ol'se4els-8uu eqlol..sJoloc,, s.euo Eur,(lpu€ Euu eqlurleg s6ouo Eumorqlelll seurTetu -rog oql tuo{ :popoc semlseE s1t 'pernlcn-4s ,(1e1ec tq8g-erd,fteuo1sno sr lseluoc qc?e 'slnoq eseqtrgo ,fts8e,res pue.,{lrsonledun sql elrdsep -r4ur le1'spunor uee.,!\pq spuoces f,uqt peuolle eql qqlllrr (Eu g eqlgo roluec eql ur {Jeru e) ,.qc1ercs,, eq} ol Eurpue6 ruqeJ loutrpc luelse}uoc e uoq \ .(1uo re,ro peureep sr lq8g V 'snorcsuoc pue ffiudn ueurer ot,(tpqe ,fte,r elnuru-eeJrll,$p,(q tou eql,(q'surrroplcoul .(q reqler lnq sluerueJcur leEuenl 96 Bare-Knuckle Boxing and the pedagogy of National Manhood 97 leads Egan to posit a rough-and-tumble pedagogy of experience, waming that "books alonewillnot inform us ofthe true state ofthings, without an intercourse with that book ofbooks, REAL LIFE. . . . It becomes, then, our duty to observe well the passing scene,, ( I : 301-02). By proposing thatthe fancy constitutes avital supplementto "the classical acquirements,, of the learned, Egan's analogy works to valorize boxing as a form of cultural capital and authenticate the street patter ofthe fan as a legitimate and cohesive discourse in its own right (not insignificantly, Egan was also a lexicographer, and the editor of a noted dicfionary ofurban slang). I accentuate Egan's relationship to language and sociabilitybecause it is evident from the opening pa ges of Boxiana thathis passion for the sport often serves as a vehicle for aggressively articulating his crudely pro-English prejudices. According to Egaq the manly art ofpugilism should be viewed as a "national propensity . . . in perfect unison with the feelings of Englishmen," a propensity which apparently erases the exigencies of station, or as Egan relates: "Distinction ofrank is of little importance when an offense has been given, and in the impulse ofthe moment, a pRINCE has forgot his royalty, by turning out to box . . . and a BISHOp, the sanctity ofhis cloth, displaying those stong and national taits so congenial to the soil of liberty" (1: 3). That the imperative to box outstrips the demands of one's civic function suggests that these staged physical encounters restage a kind ofpolitical primal scene, offering the spectator a glimpse into what Egan calls the "great obscurity" ofthe distant past where "wounded feelings brought manly resentment to its aid,, (1: 2-3). Not surprisingly, Egan goes to great lengths to anchor the sport firmly in protoEnglish history: "It has been attempted by some writers to prove that BoxNG did not originate in Great Britain; but in recurring to the times of the immortal Alfred, according to ancient authorities, we shall find, that wrestling and boxing formed a part ofthe manual exercise ofthe soldiers at that distant period. The ancient Britons have always been characterized as a manly, strong, and robust race ofpeople, inured to hardship and fatigue, and, by the exercise ofthose manly sports, acquired that peculiar strength ofarm which rendered them so decisive in warlike combats. . . . 25.3 April 2003 a.tnqnc "tDlndod ul salpnls equo qcntu ool,, se peleJqelec spJeA\JeUe slleql,,!\olq e ..'(sreu8rero3i o13urqt./y\eu e elpb) qceuols eql ur ,Eed qsq8ug, euo qlrl\,, reqopuo8 eqt sdols ,(1eug ro{etlql&'e1$uq peurldrcsrpun pue l,lrete rege isulrelc s.ueq?}l erfl ]sa]uoc o1 pe]celes te>1e1q11 qog pelueu -relq8g e punore ,(11et (,..(suotu srq ro 1cn1d slqJo tno pecunoq eq ot snql trou se.& [ng uqof,, ereq.u) $[uur Surxoq qsrlEug eqt'esuodser q' (ZZ : 1 ) ..urq lqBU o],ql -roruol orll aleqffipr oryr]ueuoddo,(ueJo euoq-a€f eq1>pe;qplnoa eq pq1 'eur4 eures oql l€ '3rn6eoq 'e,ro1E eqt u,lop .&\eJI11,, oqrvr reqopuo8 ue4 -euen e ,(q .puu1 u8rarog e o1 pelueldsrrel pue '1tos e.t4eu .noql luo{ Iuol Eureq qe-rnulqsq8ug eqlJo leeJqlluelosrn eq1,, selcruo.rqc uu8g'euo eutn -lOrr rn .,(Fug 'luouqcue4eJ crlslleuo4eu uorsecco sJexoq uoq-t6pro1 plp os '.(ceroua8ap;o lee.rql eqt tq8norq uorselul u8re;og sy 'd"reurEerul Iec -4qod repuorq eqt rog ur,fuoJeru e se Euu eq1 ryeur pq1 uorplndstp l€rnqnc pue 'uorsnlcxe 'luzrro,resrpJo slJe ,(q pepunoq sl lnq'1sed uoxeS-olEuy .,(1mur e ur pepuno6 se.tqeEorerd yecpolsq,(q perocsroplln fpo 1ou ero; -ereq1 e se ftrxoqgo ..uo4cnpord Iem[nc,, et1l ',(poq-s,ueurqsqEug eq1 pue-s.1q1pnd s .flrsuedord yeuoqeq, aq] azpredoefppom 1eq1 uorse,tn r6reroJJo 1eerql pezrmrrege ery $we8e sp.renSeyes urnl ur qcrq,l 'urs113nd 4rm uo4ednccoerd Iem{m luerorr? eql uodn lueEurluoc sr sse,lo"rd ,trulylur qq18ug :fpoq eulncsetu erluo srnol -uoc eql pue ecuds leuo4uuJo uorle4ouad;e1ur eq1 s1se33ns eq 'lsenbuoc ;o.&o1srq eql q8noqt pue q poleprTosuoc 6JrE4leuo1gart,,e se Suuoq;o .&o1srq eql salcruorrlc ue8g uaqm'snq; 'Qt-lI '?) ..em1ry ssellrrurT u olur eprT8 'luegodtur erou illls 'pue '1sed puotueurur u?Jo lno ruool sr(ervrle uorssardxe lecqrlod e,r6 ,(eql qcrqt\ ol se1els uoqeu sq1, qEnoqqe ',(rnluec qtueeffire oqgo pue erltr pre./yro] .(puDI relnclued ego tcaJlw I€rntlnc,, € ffi sacseleoc eepr eql ler11 's]se88ns uosJepuv se 'p1eq,(1apr,l 66uorleu,,Jo sIIUo sellleu eq] Suoure tplds;o fcuraueSop u 8ut sl lI 'GI :1) ..pue1st -lueJo sprunol Eurpuel se ' ' ' sluetueugoJ aleurueJJo pecnpo4ur srorenb -uoc eql eJeq \'secuelsur llreJ er,uos ur ldecxe 'fluregec;o eer8ep d.rerre qlvrr 'srfrer Surpeeccns eq1 q8norql pace4 sq ffirul,, pueyEug uy Ernxoqgo eEeerq aql 're,roero141 '(rI I) ,.HslJrug-f1oqm sr r leql 'Euueycap w : uorlegsor.I ou yee; elr '1re4 Iuuorleu e se ',(lyereueE Suqueds u '[arogorsql] leBuenl g6 Bare-Knuckle Boxing and the pedagogy of National Manhood 99 English rudeness for [the venetian] to bear" (25). Here boxing intimates a multi-layered narrative ofengagementwherein even the punches themselves embodyparticularnational values. Similarly, when the British cham- pion Tom cribb first defeated the American Tom Molineaux-an exslave described as "aperfect stranger, arude, unsophisticatedbeing [who] was too ambitious, by threatening to wrest the laurels from the English brow, and planting them upon the head of a foreigner,, (1: 361)-Egan writes that cribb succeeded in "chastisfing] the bold intruder, in protecting the national practice and honour of the country, his own character from contempt and disgrace, and the whole race of English pugilists from ridicule and derision ' (387). This baldly chauvinistic rhetoric gains a measure ofsanction from sporting associations like the pugilistic Society, specifically founded in 1814 to "keep alive the principles of courage and hardihood which have distinguished the British character, and to check the progress ofthat effeminacy which wealth is too apt to produce.,,Egan, not surprisingly, offers a ringing endorsement for the civic necessity of such clubs, comparing their cultural function to the Royal Society, Antiquarian Society, andthe Society ofArts. ForEganthen, boxing represents both amicrocosm ofand an intervention into national life, stimulating a "love ofcounty" while reinforcing a phallic masculinity presumed to be imperiled. That boxing is perceived to have wide-ranging political signifi cance becomes clear in an appendix to the fourth volume of Boxiana in which Egan reproduces an 1g20 exchange before Jeremy Bentham's "society forMutual Improvement,,, debating whether "the Magistracy of England" deseryes censure or approbation for failing to enforce the ban on boxing and "winking at what affords much amusement and keeps up the spirit and courage ofthe coun1ry?" (4: 577).The discussion that follows retums insistently to the largely working-class demographics of the fan base, and the contention bythe sporl's opponents that"pizefights were not only the means ofcollecting numerous blackguards together, but they tend more to encourage a spirit of gambling, andferocizy of disposition" (a: 5g6). The sport is subsequently defended by a "Mr. M." who, in espousing "the liberty of the 25.j April 2003 anqn) nrudod ut satpnts ,&euqdrcsrp snoLIeA su'uuo;er luusdgo.fpoq apcop,, etp se pern8guocsr eJog sr EuF eqt u1.(poq pe{eu Jeou s.JexoqSo,$rnrssatflBe Euruess eq1 ',(11ecpo4 'o{sls e }6usut[ e]Bqep oql suolsecco leql uorlsenb ,fte,r eql pasolc e s'u Etmro4clng Jleqr sscqod leql scrlceld rnereqm rue1s,& lec4qod 'IA[ '{N-(6luerugsnmd,, s1t pue ..eulJc,, eq} saop }t su Iem{nc e suolsllue Eugeguoc-tlclru puetrrct1 ueelqequolsuel eql suoqeredo qI qnpLt\satrel -od:ocur Surxoq osneceg '(SE-f St '941) ..,(lesreluoc pue 'lglesn erour seuoceq 1r su luepoqo eJolu I se{eurJleql tuslllBqceIu oq} ul l?tlt uop€leJ €Jo uorlurruoJ eql lB lnq'uo4celqns sllJo uoll€cglsuelut eql13 Jou 'sllPls s1r3o qprorE eqt }e {Iuo lou petrcerlp se^r qclg^r'ruoq se1r fpoq ueul -nq erllJo ue ue uoq/r'luetuotu eql setr seuqdtcstp eggo luetuowlecuol -srq er,LL,, :euqdrcsrp;o ldecuoc s (InBcnoC IoqcII IJo ..sempecotd Jolrru [pue] se4qepotu olqumq,, eq1;o ged ere '1u:aueE ur syods ,(m1uec-q1uee1 -etnu pIrB'Euxoq qcrq,l q ferr eqrgo sn spurueJ,(Eoleue eq1'ecqsnl1etc -osgo scrleur8urd aqt pue 'uo4eEn[qnsJo sparge lecr8o1oqc,(sd eq1'umF -qglnbe sselcJo oclreueltnsur eql ueo.,lqeq sJesl roqd4eur c4sllmqcetu eql 6enmrepdodgo padsotd erp sep8qrul,(yEtmuees Euu Surxoq arp ereH se (tSS :f)'selndstp rreqt,(q,{uouuuq3o uolldnr-relw eql JoJ asuedurocer eldure ue se srapueS-,(q eql ,(q pa,rrecer sI pu? 'esuedxe rteq113 paulBlqo alull eruus eql le sr Juaruasnu)I2 qcnlu pue 'peqsrldurocce eJe ectlsnl3o spua eql 'ecuaprud pue uopsl^A Sururoceq ql1,tr slcu'sea,1esrueq1 qsrund o1 luoql slrtolle 'ursq1 Sutqstund;o 1sq snoIpIAuI eql Jlestuq uodn 3uq4 go peelsw 'oqrrt elerlsr8eyl eq1 pue iezues -ep,(11uenbe4 feql ueqt eJolu ou sI sql trnq'paqnund Klelenes ere sarued eql 'stql Sutop ut '1eq1 'en4 st 11 'ernleredurel ,(q11eeq Iooc Jo el€ls € ol u:n1ar req1e3o1 ,{poq pw puru pue 'penpqns e;e sruoldru,(s snore8uep eql :elpeq peqcltd e ,(q reqloue euo ro5 op sarged eq1 s8urql eseql 'ure1s^(s otpJo eyls [.to1owruo{ur eI{1 31Bq€ ,(qe.reql puu 'uot1n111suoc oq1 re1(ol puB 'Sulgaypoop ,(1ddu 'rueq1 Trzaars lsnru nor(-; a,oftualovte uI uolu oIII ete'e?et qU^\ pouregul ueIAI 1,q1eJ^\ uetunq Jo ecuololl dn-1uod eq1 ol IueelsJo acroJ eql sI trBt{.tt lnq idn molq III.{\ 1I Jo 'uee1s;o ssecxe 1a1 o1 'aaqod. ,Qatos e eAEq lsnlu errr 'out8ue-uteeN aql uI ruo4Bzrler4snpm,(q pereNoJ seBemlu sslelc snouruo eql sel?tu eql JJo -pul '(8Lg :7) .,pe1se1otuun suolleeJceJ lrlro Jlegl folue o] sJopJo Je./k\ol le8uenl gg1 Bare-Knuckle Boxing and the Pedagogy of National Manhood mechanisms cultivate what Foucault calls a body's "aptitude," its l0l utility within and acquiescence to a broader "political anatomy." Foucault and contemporary theorists ofmasculinity make clear that this "political anatomy'' ofdiscipline produces a form ofgender competency that both enables and circumscribes the masculine subject: to master the skills of a sport like boxing-and thereby provide "amusemenf ' for the assembled public-is also to participate in delimiting and reif,zing a stereotypical gender position that makes the subject available to what Foucault calls "a machinery ofpower that explores it, breaks it down, and realranges it" ( 1 3 8). As a site of embattled manhood, the ring presents a stark distillation of disciplinary logic: unmanly or effeminate behavior is confirmed and spectacularly punished in an event that is measured by the ability of one man to maintain consciousness over and beyond another. That there emerges a rigorous decorum ofthe body in Foucault's model suggests a theoretical complement to Mosse's focus on the powerfi.rl sexual etiquette emergent in the period and the ideology underwritten by nineteenth-century biology's marriage ofmuscle and will. Indeed, what the fancy rallies to witness is a crude politics ofcharacter, wherein the atavistic physical identities ofthe ring's participants are shaped and acculturated by the sport itself, offering "ample recompense for the intemrption of harmony by their disputes." I invoke this complex of prevailing forces-{isciplinary, biopolitical, sexual-that accrue around the pugilistic body in order to suggest how the realization ofnational identity is a discrete affair ofmuscle and matter, arawpantomime thatenacts and seeminglygrounds one's Englishness in the material world. I want to argue that the body ofthe pugilist becomes for Cobbett ,F.gan,Hazlitt,and other Regency sportsmen a form of consolidating and sublimating the tacit violence ofnational identification and a synecdoche for the discursive theatrics of gender and nation formation. with this in mind, I want to turri now to Hazlitt's recounting ofthe HiclcnanNeate fight, long treated as little more than a familiar essay on a notoriously"blackguard subject," in orderto measure howHazlitt constructs a physical public sphere for the articulation ofthis contested masculinity. 25.3 April 200j w Eurpuoq eletu uo uoq€1tperu ',tro1s eqlyo ged,(po e anryn) nudod ut salpn$ lsoluoJo; sdeqred sI eAIlBJrBu s (lIIZeH JoJ sr sedor eql eprsul Je1tmocue 1ecrs,(qd oql lng 'uorpeiqns lemtlncJo,(poq elnop eqt go eceyd eqt ug ,firurlncseru ollsseoxe pIIB snonepne ue 8u.1tsod 'Euu eq13o 1-ro,r lecrSoloopr eql eluosun o] ueleeql uJn eJq;o s,(eldstp pue 'sc4ce1 pe88ru's1seoq1uu3or€ s.IrBIrDIcIH tuoJ'luepne euocaq ilvvr sV '(r8Z : g) .,1ueurqstund,(ue 01 elqlsuesut 'ytuur;o leoc e ,(q pe;ncesgl se luoes ,{poq puu peeq srH 'oglxo},(p+ s1{ceilu slg 'lueuoddo srqgo s8u11ee3 eql r(erusrp pue 'e1no; 'puno3:uoc o1JepJo ut 's8reqc sno;epuod eql,, 8up -regsrd'(8S :l) ,.Euxoqgo e1,(ts d:e,log eql pue'rir,roqs eq1'Eutgtqs eql,, secrrle luouoddo srq.,'erulqns eql'pUIIHs eql 'snotlnec eql $ 1l---€cuelcs elqou slluo uorlcegred eql sllqqxe,, e1r(1s Eurxoq s,eleeN eJoqm ue8g ol Surprocce rele^roH '(tS :f t) ..lolslrg IIeJo uollelnder c4sqr8nd eq1 lg 'srepynoqs ueoluellv qluv\ ' ' ' xufy urepolu e,, um{ qluc pue ..'le Jeeq ol ) fureeqc lsepou,, s 6epeN $lJeruor esrl\oTqlritzeH' (2, tZ : I epl$n ssourl€J pu? luauuoduroc ,(peurellus8yo lepour e pue Euu eqlJo eplslno UoBIS -odqp srq u ..Eussessode.rd r!sule4xe,, ..'ueur pooE,, e lunocce s.ue8g ,(q sr oleeN IIrg '1o1sug ruog suordtueqcgo euq 3uo1e ur roqlouv 'se1fis eugl -ncseu ur Jse4uoc 3unp4s u sr proye8unH eplslno pq enbserqcrd s1q1ol ureqt s8uuq leq1\ '(Z xoclrl& ur 'ptb) ..reqtoue qcns eq plno^\ roleu pue 'e.ro3:eq euo e qcns ueeq Jelou peq eJoql leql rog iaur4 slr{ sel\ A\ou 'ouo ees ol lueeru eq JoAeJr,, 1eq1 Sutlstsur ,(q srrqs4reg 'p;o;reEunH ol {er1 epur-f1xrs eql olut 6r,(esso oql pocllue erouqed 'D'd puol{ s,$qze11 'sse1 -eqlouou i(suorduuqc qsq8ug pue qsl{ eq} uee^leq trse}uoc 61 8 I snorueJ E n$elaq1) sffig re^IO ruol-.(11euuo( u€G ro xneoullol4tr-qqlrJ teer8 orluo en8ulur cruqte eql reJJo lnoq eqt soop ;ou 'reqcleg Iuef ro qqlr3 B Jo Brusuuqc eq] ssessod sleeNrouueuDlcrHJorllroN'8up eqt eplslno pue eprsur qloq err4eEorerd su[lncsetuJo seSezn eql 3lnlecrurumuocJo espdrel -ue re8rel eql o1eleurpJoqns srJleslr lseluoc,(poo1q eql urotflJo tlc€e JoJ q8noqtye slunooce pellelep spnord s.roqlne e1ue51-u€uDlclH eqgo '1noq qlog rcuBJ aquo oJII lsnqor eIIl olq,(eroJ s6roqlnu eIIUo lunoc 1e4rul ZZyI s ,n\2,e11 ueg s ouorxog s;mEES1 -xe ue'nee1qe1 luu8ele lsotu s1r sr ,.1q8rg eq1,, ,{esse ',fio1srqerd pe13ue1s.gods eq1;o drolrsoder eql le8uenl 761 Bare-Knuckle Boxing and the Pedagogy of National Manhood 103 the conversible world. As Hazlitt and others ofthe period describe it, the fancy is a communal body that fashions itself out of anecdote, measures itselfin boasting, and maintains itselfthrough convMality, even as it bears wibress to a popular entertainment so fundamentally brutal. As any reader of "The Fight" can attest, Hazlitt's essay is as much about the rigors of conversation as it is about apize fight, orperhaps it is more accurate to say that the story of "two men smashed to the ground, smeared with gore, stunned, senseless, the breath beaten out of their bodies" ( 1 7 : 82) is rivaled only by an intense need to discuss and analyze every nuance ofthe fight, from the odds in advance to the likelihood of a "cross" afterwards. Hazlitt records not only the difficulties inherent in traveling to a bout taking place ina clandestine location, butmore dramaticallythe restlessness that the flght generates in the coffee houses, inns, and tavems in the days lead- ing up to the opening exchange ofblows. Much of the first half of the essay is devotedto roaming frompublichousetopublic house, "talking of what was to happen or of what did happen, with a noble subject always at hand, and liberty to digress to others whenever they offered" (17 : 7 3) . This image ofboxing culture as aheterogeneous site of sociability bound by a coflrmon compulsion works in large part because the often gruffHazlitt not only sees the ring as a public sphere delimited by those whose discourse animates it, but because he inverts the terms as well, representing spirited conversation as pugilistic. For instance ,Hazlitt'star- rativebeginswiththe authorandhis male cohorts stayingup all night in a boisterous inn (their conversations alternating between "politics and the fight"), and focuses principally on the conversational antics of a "tall English yeoman," "a fine fellow, with sense, wit, and spirit, a hearty body and a joyous mind, free-spoken, frank, convivial-one ofthat true English breed that went with Harry the Fifth to the siege of Harfl eur" ( 1 7 : 7 7). T\e swain, whom Hazlitt explicitly compares to the renowned champion Jem Belcher, represents Hazlitt's rugged ideal in a masculine world, in part because he wields words like a cudgel: "It did one's heart good to see him brandish his oaken towel and to hear him talk. He made mince-meat of a drunken, stupid red-faced, quarrelsome frow4r farmer," who "made many 25.3 April 200j antru) fipdod ul satprus pem8g uaql sr ,.{Ilecqcer4, s.8uu oq1 ..'e1q-relqEg lou ' ' ' flueur 1ou,, se pecunouop sr 1r ,&ueg erpgo scrureur(p ..pc4cerd,, aq1 rmpvrr 1nq ,.trop4dogo sJeguru ur,, peuoqcrrus eq ffir-u s1o1xe $llzeH leql dlue,res pue ,(cuullsqo qsq8uggo uuog reqnced eq1 :,{lrurlncseur,ftquec-qluoeprmr;o sexopered pue sJelauered eqt 1no sdeur 'eurerp plJnl pu€ .fisepoul 'ecueyour pue turuocepJo uo4rsodelxnls8ue4s slql '(09-6t :11) ..uetue11ue8 ou surrr sq ,(es plnoqs 1'eun1 eures eq1 rc a8un8uel InoJ sesn eq;r 1nq'sualq rno,( 1no lrolq r(eur 'epe4go zfun eq] ul 'ueur,(elrq8rr{ e ue^g 'eoeJ s6ouo ,{-rs,re ur 'uo4ecqdurl ,(q ro ,{yleqcu Jer&ro '1sg s1q 6n rql o11ou 1nq 'ueur sq }uaq o} punoq sellr Jexoq V 'uorsseyord ouyo ged e sem ecueuq.redru[1]' ' ' 'sleueds Jo lue8ela lsoru eqt 'reqcleg uroJ sr os 'qqlrC sr oS 'uetu luolrs 'plrc erem (pe{l o^€q lou plnoc uery-seg eqt uoqlr erogeq) uo{clqO otueg eql'reqcleg tuol 'peleqeq lseq sql s,(er*r1u eJe,l\ uoru slr se ISNVS oq1,(ueduroccB plnoqs.(5epo61 'ra$oq $eg eql ",v\opeqs eql ll lnory pl?s ssel eq1 '(1ou se,l eq se) f:o1cr,r eql;o erns s€/y\ erlJl 'o{rl -reffig 1ou seml, ',(1uuru 1ou rs,l\ lI :openerq,(preesungo ern8g € q .;u?htr -sED orll,, esneceq ued ur 'surEsq tq8g eql ecuo pelsq.(lerorres eJ€ sse -mord eulncseruJo eycupeds eql Etnurecuoc sern1cr.4s s.1{lzeH 'Gt: tt) ..s8urq1 lugo yec4curd lsou eql sl qclq.& 'IJNV.{ eq} m trou mq 'uorurdo Jo sJeilBru ur os sr ll iacuapndutJ pcuapndul pcuapndruT--e1rl ut ssoc -cns o1d;essscsu sEurql oeJql eJe eJeql, leql tutxeru p1o srp ollotu slq JoJ ue{B} o^uq ol suees.&o11eg Euno.( elryppuoJ prre pelurds sFI[I],, :seuere otq eseql uee,tueq uollcouuoc eqt tycgdxe se{eu sseuuezeJq s6u€ru{crH go uo4ducsep s.llgzeH 'ruruocepJo osues e sr Euu eq1 eprsur qur4 pcrs,(qd qnd e ur esrnocsrp Ernsnor seppuere.Urp 1eq \ ',(lluecgl6ls eql uro{ s.llllzeH ul I sepacerd pq1 uo,€sJe^uoc pe,,umJeJo aorr.*Arrffi,X rruoJ Jplncelceds ur selecqder,(luoJlesI qcleru Eurxoq eql 'sprorrr reqlo w lEurueds puorpsJeluoJ qEnorql petrunlap suo4eleJ Eusmrq;o 4roruleu e su esmocJelut Iurcos spuqsJepunJoqlnu eqtr l\oq slse88ns Jerru€J pol€ -lrqeul eql 01 srelsF4upe ueuos,( eq1 pw Etmlserw luqre^ eql q e.rnsesld snoncrdsuoo s lIIzeH' G- t t 1 1 ) ..sser4rorpe 1ee.€ qtra JJo petrml reqlo qcltl r lequroc e1Eu1s ol lsruoEeluu snoJorrmq srg e>1o,rord o1 qdurege 6 : eql la8uenl 79 1 Bare-Knuckle Boxing and the Pedagogy of National Manhood 105 as its pedagogical efficacy, for in the world ofthe ring, a man must conduct himselfwith scrupulous propriety, or end the match bloodied and bruised, as the indecorous Gux-man discovers: "All fraces oflife, ofnatural expression, were gone from him. His face was like a human skull, a death's head, spouting blood. The eyes were filled with blood, the nose streamed blood, the mouth gaped blood. He was not like an actual man, but like a preternatural, spectral appearance, or like on of the figures in Dante's Inferno" (17:83). Hazlitt understands Hickman's defeat as "as fine a piece of poetical justice as I had ever wifiressed" ( I 7: 80), in large part because it corresponds to what Roland Barthes, in his now familiar meditation on wrestling, calls o'the form of a Justice which is at last intelligible." As boxing promises Hazlitt, so wrestling promises Barthes "an ideal understanding ofthings; it is the euphoria of men raised for a while above the constitutive ambiguity of everyday situations and placed before the panoramic view of a univocal Nature, in which signs at last correspond to causes, without obstacle, without evasion, without contradiction" (25). Just as verbal decorumbecomes a compensatory gesture countering the physical brutality ofbare-knuckle boxing, so does the viciousness of the ring answer the indecency of the braggart. Where Barthes' representation ofwrestling rests upon the sport's stylized but fraudulent theaterofintelligibility, Hazlitt's "fight"blurs the linebetween spectacle and sport. Thus, on the one hand, boxing becomes a mannered bit oftheater, its outcome potently scripted in the melodramatic dumbshow ofthe participants' bodies in the ring: 'o[The Gas-Man] strutted about more than a hero, sucked oranges with a supercilious air, and threw away the skin with a toss ofhis head, and went up and looked atNeate, which was an act of supererogation. The only sensible thing he did was, as he strode away from the modern Ajax, to fling out his €rms, as ifhe wanted to try whether they would do their work that day. By this time they had stipped and presented a strong contrast in appearance. IfNeate was like Ajax, 'kith Atlantean shoulders, fit to beaf' the pugilistic reputation ofall Bristol, Hickman might be compared to Diomed, light, vigorous, elastic, and his 25.3 April 2003 affiun) nlndod ut salpng Jeqtro ,(uE Jo 'no^( ruo4: ,(euow r(ue enrecer prp Jeleu I 'pooqesleJ eJr]ue ue ete pJeeq e,ruq no,( sgoder eql leql JBe,e\s o1 e1e4sl8eur e eroJeq oE o1, Sufpeld puu 'en8uol srqJo re[eq eqt ]oB o8e puu >1uuo moq Surureld -xe 'renod Iercos IBeJJo ueru B erogeq,fie8pg pue pJu,ll>It\e rrrou Jexoq 3uus88el\s ecuo eql :erueJpoleru e ut euocs e eJe,{a }rJr se sroleldsuoc eq-plno^\ o^l1 eql ueel,qeq relunocue sq] se8els ueEE 'urrq peluo{uoc (,fup9 '441) pelerfrsep uolendsuoc eqgo auo ocuo ,fuo pq'paplqrdecet regv '(gL :7)..uno1eq] rrBuDIcrH 's,(epgo eldnoc e ro;,fto1s s1q o1Eq1c4s JeAo IIe pezmq servr 1r '1ce1ut,,'selu,r ueEg ..'solcrc Surgods eq1 ur lercss e ureruer Euol lou plp luele sFIL, 'deuou aql petuo{J puu aueqcs eql pepold oqtr uetu oeJqtr eql etueu o1se rE os Suro8 uerre '1qEg erll l\orql o1 seeurn8 perpurul ueelq8re pe,uece; peq eq esnecaq tsol r{po eq }Eq} pu€ .,'pel[ [eq] rsrreueq,l,, eleeN ]eeq plnoc eq ]uq] poturelc ',(cuug equo uez -ruep luouruord u urog elnqeJ B o1 Surpuodser'ueurrlcql lue.rsEqlaq pue ue{urup e ZZgl eunt IZ uo se}eler Duotxog Jo roq}ne eqI '(gt:?) ^\orl 6.sJe>lceq s 6ueuqclH Jo IeJeAes Jo spuru er4l ril s s am sD a un Jo sruolduils leer8 [p]ecnpord,, peq qcII,K Surqleruos 'dro1s s6uel{-seD eql ol eroru sr oroq] leql Eurpecuoc f,q elrtexeu sq puo o1.(1uo 'tqBU aql -lege,(up eq] ol ruer( e lsoIule lueprcce oSeurec 3 ur ueuDlcrHJo rll€ep ernleruard pue c4eqled eql selcruorqc ue8g 'Euu eql ur qdurnr4 s,olueNJo uorlducs -ep molq-r(q-1(olq B peprrrord Surrreg 'JolcBJeqc snorunuou8r s.rrBru{crH o] >lceq ll seceJl ',(13ursud"lns 1ou 'pue lepueJsJo uorlenursw egl seleJ -oqorroc q1euuegu sll pue 1q3g sqlgo Suuepuer s,ue8g',(puecgl6ls -"Dlur suDS smor.{Jo eldnoc e rog rueql ' @g : t}..1erp eq1,(q uo*Sila eqtr e1nds1p,, ol uo s,(e1s qlrl\ lurod 11q2e11.,'urooJ Jorlloue olu osrou pue e{orus er.l} ruo+ r!\eJpWIr\, (rfusse eq1 ur go8r4 peruuuer) eJou4ed puel{ sH sy ,6'ssoJc,, e serrr rftolcrl s6olueN leql lsrsu oq,{a-suous l}rlzeH,.'slupuen pu€ sq}oD,,-sge1s dn 8uno,( go dno.6 e qtrrvruoldureqlol&rrr uut ue]€ uormuo+uoc e sequcseproqlnu eql tnoq eql reUV 'sseupeldFcsgo ruro; ,(ue snql puu 'xg eyo suorleEelle eqt pueJep o14cr.nb s1 q1ze11 .,'ec4snl1ecrpod,,;o Bu4sdurn4 6u.eEe ffig eql prrs uorlducsep srq;o sseur8els sql elrdsep 'pueq reqlo eql uo te '(I g penotu eq se,rms aq}w peue}sr181ceq :4)..epII s.reqluede o{rT]noqe laEuenl 961 Bare-Knuckle Boxing and the Pedagogy of National Manhood 107 person, to lose the battle: and I now publicly declare I was beaten by Neate against my will" (4: 79). Despite the display of contrition, Egan immediately supplies anecdotal evidence that suggests Hickman was seen cashing a f 1000 Exchequer-bill at the Bank of England shortly after the bout; however, rather than pass judgment on his subject, Egan only "pledgefs] . . . fortheplainunvamished statementwhich appears inthe succeeding pages, leaving the reader to make his own comments" (4: 7 5). The cross that haunts the bout's outcome also bedevils any telling ofthe fight: for instance, that Hickman ends his concession to Gulley by "uqw publicly declar[ing]" that he lost the fight "against his will" seemingly calls the former "public-ness" ofthe bout into question, and with it any subse- quent representation ofthe boxer's will. I raise the problem ofthe fix because it serves as a scandalous re- minder ofthe kind ofpotent ideological naratives thatplague the ring and flut define it. Where Egan seemingly tums even Hiclcnan's repentance into a counterfeit byjuxtaposing the vignette ofhis mortification with additional suspicions of shadowy "unpleasanfiress," Hazlitt insists on ajust outcome even as he tropes the entire spectacle as theater, its artfulness marked immediately and ironically by his epigraph, a misthe performances quotationofHamlet's famous resolve, "-11" fight, the fight'sthething, / Wherein I'll catch the conscience ofthe king" (17: 72). Similarly ,Hazlitt, s defense ofthe fight's integrity retums at essay's end in the form of a curious postscript: "P.S. Toms called upon me the next day, to ask me ifl did not think the fight was a complete thing? I said I thought it was. I hope he will relish my account of it" (17: 36). Hazlitt's equivocal closure-the fi ght's "completeness" is ultimately avowed only beyond the boundaries of the narrative itself, thereby allowing always for supplementary revisions-points to the way in whichbare-knuckle boxing in Regency England is complicit in a greater narative project of imagining and reconstituting national manhood. I intenogate the manner in which Hazlitt's text figures the fight as both a self-consciously constructed artifact and a brutal event unfolding in real time because I want to end by showing how Hazlitt's conflicted representation ofboxing participates in what might be called 25.3 April 2003 atnilnc firudod ut satprys Jo sueotu e 'erElelsou relndodgo seueleJ eql olut uorluelJelul rre soruoc -oq fesse s.$llzeH l€ql slseSSns 'uor1e1ncq"re pug ol sree,(.(gg silu^r luql acuelues € ur Jorller ro 'p.resqun Ermtrleruos ut soll moq equo 0rl I ..f[fl.t1,, '1ce[ord cr8olerp z sr.ftolsrqgo eql Euqlel oql repuruar leqJ Iurnl ^\oqJo -cn4s e-e8essed eql ut pesolcue eJe repueJJns polsnuqxs s.uolq8norg uele pu?'uorsse3:uoc peq-qluep s 6geqqln3's.uosueAelg's.ueure11ue8 reple eql 's.gqze11-secro^ peppeqrueJo e13ue1e sr eueos erltr '{lqEoN (99-gg:11)'ppon eql 01 lsol eq tou tq8rur 11 treq1 esofund uo lq8g eqlJo lunocce slql ueilu,l\ eleq I pue ,,leJn1eu uer.unqJo lrq E se.&,,'ueruellue8 qleg eql prus ,,'srq1,, ,.,'q8noue peq p€q eq leql '11e go puno.r lsel eql ur dn urq pegU eq s€ turrl poJedsrq,r aq -rog luolq8norg re1 -seyr1 qltm tqSg lsPI leql uo^\ uosuo^elS re1se6,(prBuec leql JoJ 'lq8u 1es ot per{sr,r eq Surql euo se1( eJeq} luql 'se,(, 'pererrrsue eq'sseguoc ol per{sr,r eq qcrrl,4A, puru sn{ uo Surq{ue sB,^A eJeql Jr rurq pe>lsu,(eq1 pue'peq-qlBep srrl uo s€1Y\ uoqqln) uqol uoq.^A 'es€o oql sB^. srql leql no,( ol elord ol puv ',fto1cr,r eql eur e.r,e8 moul no.(, 'uosuerr.elg s(es .'qcrq,r, ,iq8noue peq ea..1 'erou ou lqBg II,L 'urF{ ot pres eq 'dn rurq pegrl (UeqqlnJ uqof) puoces slq se leql 'se,r 1ce; eql lng 'elguq er{l uo/r\ oler1 o} prBS s€1( eq pue 'rnoleJ srrl ut e.te8 qour eql'lsouueddn 11e; uolq8norg 1l JelsBI sB pue euo uodn IIoJ eA\ pue 'pue1s plnoc 'reqloue J snJo reqlrau pelsneqxe os eJoa etr'punor 1s€l oql ur dn sn leq1 pegrl spuocos eql ueql[ 'relsetu ,ro,oq no,( IIal II,L, 'll A\oll€ 'se.u 1 .(1rreg eq ourl lsel eql pue tou pp plro^\ oql q8noql 'ruq leeq 'serurt oorqt ru1q qt1.,t,r 1q8no; peq eg leql :sa1 pr€s eg iuolq8norg ueleeq Ja^e p€q er{JI ruq pe{se I ecuo ' ' ' 'spJe^\Jege sree^( auros rurq I ueql( u€ru plo uE s€,^A eH 's.req1e; ,(ugo puer{ s ol ueru ^\BS -r{cuoc sea uosuelels o8loeg,,-uo }uo,,rr eH 'uoryue11e r(ur pele,ru pue (el,u urqlvrt ,(ceqdo.rd go 1r-rrds eql peJeU€U Suruur8eq srql :pelecldruoc $ euecs equo EuuepueJ s(lITZeH fgersre,ro4uoc pepuo lerlt qclelrI e ,,oOLLUee^ eq] uI ' ' ' uosue^els eEroeD pue uolqEnoJg snorueJ eql uee.&qaq ffig e,,;o olsl Ielueu4uos 3ql qlel uql repls eql lulncruEd uI 'qno,( srq rn pesset4r,r oq qnoqrelo Suzposduqr.(llecr8lslsou q1eg uro{ 5(u?[uellue8 plo" u3 o1Suruelsrl qc€oc 3 ur .JrI8l.{ eqJ,, spuo llrTzeH 'luesordeqlJo oJII a^p equo Surdd€u e',fto1srq lelueruques -ca,ge pInU eql qEnorql 6ed relndod le8uenl gg 1 Bare-Knuckle Boxing and the Pedagogy of National Manhood 109 givingvoice to what "the world did not allow."Hazlitt'schance meeting with the older fan has its antecedent in the same fan's youthful conversationwiththe aging Stevenson, andcoming as itdoes immediately afterthe Neate-Hiclanan bout, the tableau in the coach serves to situate the 1 821 fight within the history of a discursive community, and more importantly, within a history ofprize-fighting that is perpetually under revision. While the actual stuggles in the ring metoryrmically condense (and figuatively, if tenuously, answer) cultural anxieties over national identification and masculine decline, it is the subsequent need to re-present these encounters anecdotally that at once underwrites the sport and reaffrms the structure ofmale bonds in the period. Each outlaw match, unspeakable within the official discourse ofthe state, becomes a part of a vernacular history of modern English masculinity, told and retold in the makeshift fratemities that emerge when men seek out a common idiom. Hazlitt's melding of conversation and boxing reflects the interconnections between strategies of discourse that foster consensus and a sport that unfolds like a system of signs. The event that possesses such a lurid fascination for the men who crowd the ring also provides a model of etiquette for the raucous business of the emergent "public sphere." Ironically, it is as if Hazlitt sees in the bloody physical match ofmen an originary moment for the proper construction of civil society, an origin that, as he reminds us, reverberates through the best conversation: "ffie talked ofthis and that with amicable difference, roving and sipping ofmany subjects, but still invariablywe retumed to the fight" (17: 78). Scott J. Juengel Department of English 20l MorrillHall Michigan State University East Lansing, MI 48824 25.j April 2003 atryru) nudod ul satpnts qlnos oql q uopBrrossv ornllnJ rBlndod erD tnoqB uopBruroJu.r puB 'seullpgn8 uolssFuqns'xapu1 oapulnrunc eq1'sanssl lsud luece,r .ro; 7cds78ro'qsg8uoalpppna a,r.t,// : d$q :dra,ru1p1,ru( Jeqruau preoq {q paqu}uluru 'agsqe,rl.3g3g eqt }IslA 'Ei6l'dn -pleg .. 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