Improvement and romance : constructing the myth of the Highlands
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Improvement and romance : constructing the myth of the Highlands
(Language, discourse, society)
Macmillan, 1989
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Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In 1746 the Highlands of Scotland were still an alien province: separated from the rest of the kingdom by language, culture and social system, they were the scene of the last military uprising to occur on the British mainland. Within half a century that otherness had been tamed and assimilated by a remarkable semiotic operation - it had been made into a romance. This study attempts to trace the origins of the romantic image of the Highlands which still survives today, by examining the economic, military and ideological circumstances of the region's subjugation by the British state. It combines literary criticism and cultural history to produce an original case study of the making of the myth.
Table of Contents
- Part 1 Converting the uncouth savage: integration
- the fool
- the rogue
- the beggar
- the history of civilization. Part 2 Warriors: barbarians
- recruiting
- battles long ago
- virtue
- regimentals
- reaction
- the peninsula. Part 3 The land: the picturesque
- trees
- ruling the waves
- the sublime
- bounty. Part 4 Ghosts: the superstitions of the Highlands of Scotland, considered as the subject of poetry, the well-taught Hind
- the tale of other times
- memorials. Part 5 Social tribes: a stay of execution
- poetry and emigration
- sacred retreats
- the language of nature
- Caledonia. Part 6 Holidays: make-believe
- the tourist in the text
- the huntsman
- leisure and industry. Part 7 The structure of the myth: peripheralization
- nature
- community.
by "Nielsen BookData"