Abstract
In an article detailing the ‘cultural terrain’ of the village inn, Maye, Ilbery, and Kneafsey (2005) recently argued for the need of more culturally informed geographical work on the changing nature of the public house. A possible avenue of investigation, it is suggested, is a consideration of how various consumers make ‘sense’ of their pubs, and how different practises and meanings overlay each other within this quintessentially rural setting. In undertaking such studies, notions of heterogeneous association and ‘lifescape’ may be usefully employed in shedding light on the peculiar mixture of people, objects and interactions within this space. Drawing upon ethnographic research undertaken in a Bedfordshire pub, the ‘Six Tuns’, this paper will consider a collective labelled the ‘New Squirearchy’; a fraction of local residents who may be loosely defined through their apparent efforts to recreate the perceived roles and lifestyle of the archetypal English country gentleman. Here it is argued that the public house acts as a key space in which this identity is overtly negotiated and played out, and one that is appropriated within the midst of other pub-dwellers by these ‘New Squires’.
Notes
Notes
[1] The name of the public house, as with ‘Eamesworth’ and those characters mentioned within the text are fictitious in order to preserve anonymity. Furthermore, certain details regarding various respondents have also been altered on this basis.