Thomas Muir of Huntershill: Essays for the Twenty First Century
★★★★★
★★★★★
English
Those researching the history of political democracy in Scotland will inevitably find that one name stands out from the crowd, namely that of Thomas Muir of Huntershill. He was one of several people tried in Scottish courts during the 1790s for the alleged crime of 'Sedition', and four of the others share commemoration with him on a large monument in Edinburgh, but somehow Muir seems special. The way he used his trial as a platform to promote the logic of 'an equal representation of the People in the House of the People' was extremely dramatic and was fully reported at the time both in newspapers and in several published editions of the trial proceedings. Yet somehow historians have never been fully convinced about Muir's claim to recognition. For some he represents a sour note in the triumphant story of the Scottish Enlightenment, while others have dismissed him as a failure in his own time, conceding little consequence to the example he set for future generations. Over the years there have been attempts to right what many people regard as a grievous wrong, in this respect. This substantial and insightful edited volume adds to the debate the views of Rhona Brown, Gerard Carruthers, Tom Devine, Tom Dowds, Satinder Kaur, Thomas Lemoine, David McVey, Don Martin, Gordon Pentland, Alex Salmond, Beverley Sherry, Alex Watson, Jimmy Watson, and Ronnie Young.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
Publication Date: 15 Dec 2016
Publisher: Zeticula Ltd
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781846220517
About
Gerard Carruthers FRSE is Francis Hutcheson Professor of Scottish Literature at the University of Glasgow. He is also General Editor of the Oxford University Press Edition of the Works of Robert Burns and Co-Editor (with Liam McIlvanney) of The Cambridge Companion to Scottish Literature (Cambridge University Press 2012). He has published several dozen essays and book-chapters on eighteenth-century literature and culture in Scotland. Don Martin is a retired librarian who serves as Secretary of the Friends of Thomas Muir. He has published many books and articles on local history subjects and is currently Co-ordinating Editor of the Scottish Local History Forum journal Scottish Local History. He is a committee member of several local history societies.
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