Taverns [ Food & Drink venues ]
… art and literature of the period they are associated with prostitution, gambling, drinking, and theft. While Addison and Steele’s theorization of polite urban sociability included taverns as well as coffeehouse, 2 their ideas became more … But at their heart was an emerging culture of masculine conviviality, which had begun to move away from Addison and Steele’s ideal of informed and witty conversation towards a form of sociability that emphasized shared experience through … In the DIGIT.EN.S Anthology The London Spy ( 1703 ) on taverns. The Spectator , no. 49 (26 April 1711) by Richard Steele. Henry Fielding, Jonathan Wild The Great , book 3, chapter 14 . In the DIGIT.EN.S Anthology The London Spy …
Celebration | Conviviality | Dining | French Revolution | Prostitution | Radicalism
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