12770nam 2200673 a 450 991082950110332120240417020755.01-78371-569-30-585-42574-41-84964-085-8(CKB)1000000000521481(StDuBDS)AH22933388(SSID)ssj0000216477(PQKBManifestationID)11181478(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000216477(PQKBWorkID)10197094(PQKB)11267269(MiAaPQ)EBC3386070(MiAaPQ)EBC5390961(Au-PeEL)EBL3386070(CaPaEBR)ebr2001151(CaONFJC)MIL987230(OCoLC)86081823(EXLCZ)99100000000052148119991209d2000 uy 0engur|||||||||||txtccrThe origins of Scottish nationhood /Neil DavidsonLondon ;Sterling, Va. Pluto Press20001 online resource (272 p.)Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph0-7453-1609-3 0-7453-1608-5 Includes bibliographical references and index.Intro -- Contents -- Preface, Acknowledgements, Dedication -- Introduction -- 1. What Is National Consciousness? -- Defining a Nation -- National Consciousness and Class Consciousness -- National Consciousness and Nationalism -- What National Consciousness Is Not -- 2. From National Consciousness to Nation States -- Psychological Formation -- Geographical Extension -- Social Diffusion -- 3. Was There a Scottish Nation Before 1707? -- The 'Holy Trinity' -- The Missing Components of National Consciousness -- The Limits of Psychological Formation -- Lowland Perceptions of Highland Society -- Highland Perceptions of Lowland Society -- 4. Highland versus Lowland, Scotland versus England -- The First Modern Britons -- The Colley Thesis -- 5. Scotland After 1707: Oppressed or Oppressor Nation? -- Internal Colonialism? -- Cultural Imperialism? -- The Highlands: an Exceptional Case? -- Imperial Caledonia? -- 6. British Imperialism and National Consciousness in Scotland -- Scots and the British Empire -- Warriors -- Colonists -- 7. Scottish History and Highland Mythology -- Tourism and Tartanry -- 8. The Reality of the Highlands: Social Assimilation and the Onslaught on Gaelic Culture -- The Potato Famine and the Test of Nationhood -- 9. Burns and Scott: Radical and Conservative Nations -- Burns and Radicalism -- Scott and Conservatism -- Leaving the Eighteenth Century -- 10. Class Consciousness and National Consciousness In the Age of Revolution -- The Consequences of Combined and Uneven Development 1: Economic -- The Consequences of Combined and Uneven Development 2: Social and Political -- Scottish Radicalism and British National Consciousness -- The Britishness of Scottish Radicalism -- Conclusion -- Afterword -- Notes -- Preface, Acknowledgements, Dedication -- Introduction -- Chapter 1: What is National Consciousness?.Chapter 2: From National Consciousness To Nation States -- Chapter 3: Was There a Scottish Nation Before 1707? -- Chapter 4: Highland versus Lowland, Scotland versus England -- Chapter 5: Scotland After 1707: Oppressed Or Oppressor Nation? -- Chapter 6: British Imperialism and National Consciousness In Scotland -- Chapter 7: Scottish History and Highland Mythology -- Chapter 8: The Reality of the Highlands: Social Assimilation and the Onslaught on Gaelic Culture -- Chapter 9: Burns and Scott: Radical and Conservative Nations -- Chapter 10: Class Consciousness and National Consciousness In the Age of Revolution -- Conclusion -- Afterword -- Index -- Aberdeen, Battle of [1644] 71 -- absolutism -- 30-2 -- 33 -- 54 -- in Scotland 58-9 -- in Scotland 58-9 -- in Scotland 77 -- in Scotland 77 -- in Scotland 82 -- in Scotland 82 -- Acadia [Nova Scotia] 107 -- Africa, Portuguese colonies 97 -- Aiton, William 190 -- Allan, Theodore 145-6 -- American colonies, and Scots -- 76 -- 109 -- American nationalism 36 -- American War of Independence [1776-84] -- 115 -- 117 -- 120 -- 122 -- 124-6 -- Anderson, Benedict -- 11 -- 13 -- 41 -- Anderson, James -- 80 -- 87 -- Anderson, Robert 53 -- Anglican Church 87 -- Anglo-Scottish union -- advantages to Scotland and England 82-3 -- and equality 79 -- and feudalism 81 -- and feudalism 182 -- and political rights 182-4 -- and Scottish bourgeoisie 80-1 -- closer union advocated 188-9 -- ideological origins of 82 -- role of religion 86-8 -- Anne of Denmark 137 -- Argyll, Earls of -- 58 -- 78 -- Armitage, David 107 -- artisan guilds -- 177-8 -- 185-6 -- Asquith, H.H. 95 -- Atlantic working class 45 -- Australia 87 -- Azeglio, Massimo d' 37 -- Baines, Paul 135 -- Baird, John 203 -- banal nationalism 18-19 -- Bannerman, Campbell 95 -- Bannockburn, Battle of [1314] -- 48 -- 50-1 -- Barnard, F.M. 22.Barrington, William Wildman, Viscount 120 -- Barrow, Geoffrey -- 48 -- 72 -- Barthes, Roland 205 -- Bartlett, Robert 25 -- Basilicon Doron 65 -- Bawcutt, Patricia 65 -- Beattie, James 130 -- Bell, Ian 2 -- Bernard of Linton 48 -- Berresford Ellis, Peter -- 104 -- 157 -- 166 -- 167 -- Beveridge, Craig -- 96 -- 205 -- 206 -- 207 -- Bible -- and concept of nation 24-5 -- German translation of 29-30 -- in vernacular 32-3 -- in vernacular 32-3 -- in vernacular 57 -- in vernacular 57 -- Biddiss, Michael 15 -- Billig, Michael -- 15 -- 16 -- 17 -- 18 -- 19 -- 29 -- 36 -- Bismarck, Prince Otto von 36 -- Black Watch -- 117 -- 118 -- Blair, Hugh 130 -- Boece, Hector -- 65 -- 133 -- Bolingbroke, Henry St John 19 -- Bonnymuir, Battle of [1820] 180 -- Bothwell Bridge, Battle of [1679] 66 -- bourgeoisie -- 31-2 -- 33-5 -- Bowman, John 135-6 -- Braverman, Harry 172 -- Braxfield, Robert Macqueen, lord 186 -- Brayshaw, Joseph 191 -- Breuilly, John -- 13-14 -- 35 -- 44 -- Brims, John 189 -- British army -- 116-22 -- and Highland costume 136-7 -- and Highland costume 138 -- and Highlanders 118-19 -- Lowland officers 117 -- British consciousness -- 189-90 -- 191-3 -- and British nationalism 202 -- British Empire -- and national consciousness 112 -- and national consciousness 114 -- and Scottish economy 107 -- participation of Scots 106-11 -- participation of Scots 113 -- participation of Scots 197 -- participation of Scots 202 -- British Fisheries Society 139 -- British nationalism -- 193 -- 202 -- British state -- 197-8 -- and nation-building 46 -- and Scottish and Irish workers 194 -- as nationstate 197 -- core/periphery relationship 91-2 -- core/periphery relationship 94 -- formation of new ruling class 78 -- Great Britain as Scotticism 109 -- idea of 79 -- rights and obligations 198 -- Britishness -- 79 -- 114.130 -- 201-2 -- 202 -- and British Empire 112-13 -- and British Empire 115 -- and Burns, Robert 157 -- and general strike proclamation 191 -- and Scottish bourgeoisie 80 -- as elite identity 166 -- Colley thesis 85-9 -- colonial 122 -- conflated with Englishness 201 -- construction of 85-6 -- construction of 89 -- role of religion 85-6 -- Scottish component 101-2 -- Scottish component 126-7 -- Brown, Callum 61 -- Bruce, Robert -- 49-50 -- 72 -- 155 -- 190 -- 198 -- Brutus the Trojan -- 25 -- 49 -- Buchanan, Keith 103 -- Burgess, Keith 92 -- Burns, Marilyn 155 -- Burns, Robert -- 97 -- 100 -- 152-9 -- 162-3 -- 208 -- and Britishness 157 -- and Britishness 158 -- and Britishness 159 -- and dual national consciousness 151 -- and dual national consciousness 162-3 -- and dual national consciousness 167 -- and Jacobitism 155-6 -- and monarchy 156 -- and monarchy 157 -- and radicalism 154-9 -- and radicalism 190 -- and Scottish nationalism 154-5 -- and Scottish nationalism 158 -- and universal solidarity 153 -- and universal solidarity 153 -- and universal solidarity 154 -- and universal solidarity 154 -- background 152 -- contradictions 158-9 -- different interpretations of 155-7 -- Burns, William 111 -- Burt, Edward -- 75 -- 76 -- Bute, John Stuart, Earl of -- 83 -- 84 -- Cairns, John -- 32 -- 59 -- Calder, Angus -- 46 -- 90 -- 102 -- 158 -- Caledonian Asylum 139 -- Callender, James -- 110 -- 111 -- 191 -- Callinicos, Alex -- 40 -- 91 -- 170 -- Cameron of Locheil 137 -- Campbell, James 103 -- Campbells -- 58 -- 71 -- 73 -- 74 -- 124 -- Canada -- 107 -- 114 -- 122 -- canals 107 -- Cannadine, David -- 64 -- 69 -- 89 -- Cape Breton Island 106 -- capitalism -- and bourgeoisie 34 -- and exploitation 39 -- and exploitation 45 -- and national consciousness 54 -- and nationalism 27-8 -- and nationalism 27-8.and nationalism 33 -- and nationalism 33 -- and nationalism 35-6 -- and nationalism 35-6 -- and nationalism 37 -- and nationalism 37 -- and nationalism 41 -- and nationalism 41 -- and nationalism 44-5 -- and nationalism 44-5 -- and nationalism 47 -- and nationalism 47 -- effect on Scottish society 178-9 -- impact on feudal society 28 -- Carlyle, Thomas -- 56 -- 99 -- Carron Iron Works 171 -- Catalonia 33 -- Catherine the Great 102 -- Catholic relief 88 -- Catholics/Catholicism -- and national identity 32 -- and national identity 33 -- and radicalism 180 -- France 85 -- France 86 -- in Highland society 69 -- Irish 146 -- Irish 180-1 -- Irish 194-5 -- Cavour, C.B. conte di 36 -- Celtic nationalism 91 -- Celtification 139 -- Chapman, Malcolm 129 -- Charles I -- 70 -- 77 -- Charles II 59 -- Chartist movement 192 -- Chaucer, Geoffrey 57 -- Chesapeake tobacco -- 107 -- 108 -- Church of Scotland -- 61 -- 69 -- 87 -- 142 -- and national consciousness 52 -- and national consciousness 52 -- and national consciousness 53 -- and national consciousness 53 -- and national consciousness 62 -- and national consciousness 62 -- and national consciousness 88 -- and national consciousness 88 -- and national consciousness 128 -- and national consciousness 128 -- civil society, and the state 196-7 -- clan tartans 138 -- Clarke, Tony 188 -- class consciousness -- 11-13 -- 37-8 -- 45-6 -- and class identity 18 -- and common interests 12-13 -- and national consciousness 11-13 -- and national consciousness 38 -- and national consciousness 44 -- and national consciousness 151 -- and national consciousness 162 -- and national consciousness 165 -- and working class 12 -- and working class 12 -- and working class 165 -- and working class 165 -- and working class 166 -- and working class 166 -- and working class 186-7.and working class 186-7.The traditional view of the Scottish nation holds that it first arose during the Wars of Independence from England in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. Although Scotland was absorbed into Britain in 1707 with the Treaty of Union, Scottish identity is supposed to have remained alive in the new state through separate institutions of religion (the Church of Scotland), education, and the legal system. Neil Davidson argues otherwise. The Scottish nation did not exist before 1707. The Scottish national consciousness we know today was not preserved by institutions carried over from the pre-Union period, but arose after and as a result of the Union, for only then were the material obstacles to nationhood - most importantly the Highland/Lowland divide - overcome. This Scottish nation was constructed simultaneously with and as part of the British nation, and the eighteenth century Scottish bourgeoisie were at the forefront of constructing both. The majority of Scots entered the Industrial Revolution with a dual national consciousness, but only one nationalism, which was British. The Scottish nationalism which arose in Scotland during the twentieth century is therefore not a revival of a pre-Union nationalism after 300 years, but an entirely new formation. Davidson provides a revisionist history of the origins of Scottish and British national consciousness that sheds light on many of the contemporary debates about nationalism.National characteristics, ScottishHistory18th centuryNationalismScotlandHistory18th centuryScotlandHistory18th centuryScotlandHistoryUnion, 1707National characteristics, ScottishHistoryNationalismHistory941.107Davidson Neil1957-2020.1474316MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910829501103321The origins of Scottish nationhood3928032UNINA