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Britons : forging the nation, 1707-1837 / Linda Colley.
Athenaeum of Philadelphia - Circulating Collection DA485 .C65 1992
Available
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Colley, Linda.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Nationalism.
- History.
- National characteristics, British.
- Great Britain--Civilization--18th century.
- Great Britain.
- Civilization.
- Great Britain--Civilization--17th century.
- National characteristics, British--History.
- Nationalism--Great Britain--History.
- Physical Description:
- x, 429 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
- Place of Publication:
- New Haven, [Conn.] London : Yale University Press, 1992.
- Summary:
- In this splendidly wide-ranging and compelling book, Linda Colley recounts how a new British nation was invented in the wake of the Act of Union between England and Wales and Scotland in 1707. She describes how a succession of major wars with Catholic France - culminating in the epic conflict with Napoleon - served as both a threat and a tonic, forcing the diverse peoples of this deeply Protestant culture into closer union and reminding them of what they had in common. She shows how the world-wide empire, which was the prize of so much successful warfare, gave men and women from different ethnic and social backgrounds a powerful incentive to be British. In the process, she not only demonstrates how an overarching British identity came to be superimposed on to much older regional and national identities, but she also illumines why it is that these same older identities - be it Scottishness or Welshness or Englishness or regionalism of one kind or another - have re-emerged and become far more important in the late twentieth century. An integral part of Colley's story are the aspirations, ambitions and antics of individual Britons. She supplies masterly vignettes of well-known heroes and politicians like Horatio Nelson and William Pitt the Younger, of bourgeois patriots like Thomas Coram and John Wilkes, and of artists and writers who helped forge our image of Britishness - William Hogarth, Benjamin West, David Wilkie, J.M.W. Turner, Charlotte Bronte and Walter Scott. She draws on paintings, plays, cartoons, diaries, almanacs, sermons and songs to bring vividly to life an array of men and women who have previously been left out of the historical record, from the British army officers whostaged a medieval tournament in Philadelphia to defy the American 'rebels', to the women who raised money for a nude statue of the duke of Wellington, to the hundreds of thousands of working men who volunteered to fight the French in 1803. Throughout, she analyses patriotism rather than assumes its existence, and shows it to have been a remarkably diverse and often rational phenomenon. Finely written and lavishly illustrated, this highly original and timely book is a major contribution to our understanding of Britain's past and to the contemporary debate about the shape and identity of Britain in the future.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN:
- 0300057377
- OCLC:
- 25630983
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