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Studies in the History and Culture of Scotland
ISSN: 1661-6863
This series presents a new reading of Scottish culture, establishing how Scots, and non-Scots, experience the devolved nation. Within the context of a rapidly changing United Kingdom and Europe, Scotland is engaged in an ongoing process of self-definition. The series will deal with this process as well as with cultural phenomena, from debates about the relative value of Gaelic-based, Scots and Anglicised culture, to period-specific definitions of Scottish identity. Orally transmitted culture – from traditional narratives to songs, customs, beliefs and material culture – will be a key consideration, along with the reconstruction of historical periods in cultural texts (visual and musical as well as historical). Taken as a whole, the series will go some way towards achieving a new understanding of a country with potential for development into parallel treatments of locally based cultural phenomena. The series welcomes monographs as well as collected papers.
17 publications
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Devolution of Power to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland:The Inner History
Tony Blair’s Cabinet Papers, 1997 Volume One, Devolution in Scotland and Wales©2023 Others -
The Flute in Scotland from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century
©2020 Monographs -
Anti-Catholic Strategies in Eighteenth-Century Scotland
©2004 Monographs -
Devolution of Power to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland: The Inner History
Tony Blair’s Cabinet Papers, 1997 Volume Two, The Representative Government in Northern Ireland©2023 Others -
The Girl Who Lived On Her Clothes
The People of Paisley and the New Poor Law, 1839–76©2024 Monographs -
Scotland and Arbroath 1320 – 2020
700 Years of Fighting for Freedom, Sovereignty, and Independence©2020 Edited Collection -
The Fiction of Brian McCabe and (Scottish) Identity
©2013 Monographs -
Scotland 2014 and Beyond – Coming of Age and Loss of Innocence?
©2015 Conference proceedings -
Coin, Kirk, Class and Kin
Emigration, Social Change and Identity in Southern Scotland©2011 Monographs