This lively and erudite cultural history of Scotland, from the Jacobite defeat of 1745 to the death of an icon, Sir Walter Scott, in 1832, examines how Scottish identity was experienced and represented in novel ways. Weaving together previously unpublished archival materials, visual and material culture, dress and textile history, Viccy Coltman re-evaluates the standard clichés and essentialist interpretations which still inhibit Scottish cultural history during this period of British and imperial expansion. The book incorporates familiar landmarks in Scottish history, such as the visit of George IV to Edinburgh in August 1822, with microhistories of individuals, including George Steuart, a London-based architect, and the East India Company servant, Claud Alexander. It thus highlights recurrent themes within a range of historical disciplines, and by confronting the broader questions of Scotland's relations with the rest of the British state it makes a necessary contribution to contemporary concerns.
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Product Details
Weight: 870g
Dimensions: 179 x 253mm
Publication Date: 14 Nov 2019
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781108417686
About Viccy Coltman
Viccy Coltman is a professor of history of art at the University of Edinburgh where she is an authority on eighteenth-century visual and material culture in Britain. The author of four books including two monographs an edited and co-edited volume Coltman has been awarded fellowships by the Whitney Humanities Center at Yale the Huntington Library the National Gallery of Washington DC and the British School at Rome amongst others. In 2006 she was awarded a Philip Leverhulme Prize in recognition of her outstanding contribution to History of Art. Coltman is currently the academic lead on a MOOC a Massive Open Online Course on 'Bonnie Prince Charlie and the Jacobites' in collaboration with the National Museums Scotland.