A Night at the Inn
Space, Place, and the Elite Experience of Empire, 1650–1850
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Publishing:11th Jun '26
£27.00 was £30.00
This title is due to be published on 11th June, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

A bold reinterpretation of Georgian Britian and North America that puts inns at the heart of the imperial project. Between the turnpike or toll road revolution of the mid-eighteenth and the advent of the railways in the mid-nineteenth century, inns were ubiquitous across the Anglo-American world. During this period, inn going was universal among the elite citizens of that world and they feature prominently in contemporary accounts and literature as places of rest, nourishment, and merriment. A Night at the Inn follows the experiences of an elite traveller on a journey through the North Atlantic world. What becomes clear along the way is that inns were much more than somewhere for a drink, a meal and a bed for the night; they played a central role in what was first a British, later Anglophone, process of national and imperial placemaking. Whether in Scotland, Virginia, or Jamaica, 'principal inns' contained the useful spaces and things that society's ruling elites needed to establish and maintain power. Moreover, familiar in their sameness, from one inn to the next the material world experienced inside principal inns shaped elite inn-goers' perceptions of place, confirming that here - wherever here was - was somewhere familiar, somewhere 'civilised', somewhere British. Highly illustrated and drawing on extensive field studies, archival and literary sources, Daniel Maudlin offers a new reading of the everyday places and spaces that made and sustained the British Empire, and whose legacies continue to reverberate today.
ISBN: 9780198867050
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
304 pages