Fr. 90.00

Jacobitism and Cultural Memory, 16881820

English · Hardback

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Description

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This Element has three objectives. First, it highlights the diversity of the nature of Jacobitism in the long eighteenth century by drawing attention to multi-media representations of Jacobitism and also to multi-lingual productions of the Jacobites themselves, including works in Irish Gaelic, Latin, Scots, Scots Gaelic and Welsh. Second, it puts the theoretical perspectives of cultural memory studies and book history in dialogue with each other to examine the process through which specific representations of the Jacobites came to dominate both academic and popular discourse. Finally, it contributes to literary studies by bringing the literature of the Jacobites and Jacobite Studies into the purview of more mainstream scholarship on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century literatures, providing a fuller perspective on the cultural landscape of that period and correcting a tendency to ignore or downplay the presence of Jacobitism. This title is also available as Gold Open Access on Cambridge Core.

List of contents










1. Introduction: Jacobitism and cultural memory; 2. Shaping Jacobitism, 1688 to 1746; 3. Re-membering Jacobitism, 1747-1830; References.

Summary

This Element explores the Jacobitism, focusing on multi-media representations and multi-lingual productions. It integrates theoretical perspectives from Cultural Memory Studies and Book History to examine how specific Jacobite representations dominated academic and discourse. This title is also available as Gold Open Access on Cambridge Core.

Foreword

This Element reconsiders the construction of the cultural memory of Jacobitism within the changing 18th- and 19th-century media ecology.

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