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Journal ArticleDOI

Britons: Forging the Nation 1707-1837.

Eliga H. Gould, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1993 - 
- Vol. 50, Iss: 1, pp 119
TLDR
In this paper, Colley explains how a new British nation was invented in the wake of the 1707 Act of Union, and how this new national identity was nurtured through war, religion, trade and imperial expansion.
Abstract
How was Great Britain made? And what does it mean to be British? In this prize-winning book, Linda Colley explains how a new British nation was invented in the wake of the 1707 Act of Union, and how this new national identity was nurtured through war, religion, trade and imperial expansion. Here too are numerous individual Britons - heroes and politicians like Nelson and Pitt; bourgeois patriots like Thomas Coram and John Wilkes; artists, writers and musicians who helped to forge our image of Britishness; as well as many ordinary men and women whose stories have never previously been told. Powerful and timely, this lavishly illustrated book is a major contribution to our understanding of Britain's past and to the growing debate about the shape and survival of Britain and its institutions in the future. \"The most dazzling and comprehensive study of a national identity yet to appear in any language.\" Tom Nairn, Scotsman \"A very fine book ...challenging, fascinating, enormously well-informed.\" John Barrell, London Review of Books \"Wise and bracing history ...which provides an historical context for debate about British citizenship barely begun.\" Michael Ratcliffe, Observer \"Controversial, entertaining and alarmingly topical ...a delight to read.\"Philip Ziegler, Daily Telegraph \"Uniting sharp analysis, pungent prose and choice examples, Colley probes beneath the skin and lays bare the anatomy of nationhood.\" Roy Porter, New Statesman & Society

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Dissertation

Genealogy as theatre of self-identity: a study of genealogy as a cultural practice within Britain since c. 1850

Hannah Little
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyse genealogy as a form of semi-autobiographical narrative about the self instead of viewing the use of archives primarily as a marker of historical scholarship, and investigate the archive as a shared space or horizon in which stories about self and one's descent are enacted, a theatrical space in which the 'narratability' of the self and of others is exposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

New perspectives on slavery and emancipation in the british caribbean

TL;DR: New approaches to British imperial history and the rise of Atlantic history have had a strong influence on historians specializing in the history of the British-colonized Caribbean during the era of slavery.
Dissertation

Sympathy and transatlantic literature : place, genre, and emigration

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigate the effect of emigration and place on genre and follow the trajectory from documentary to fictive forms and from a small gap to one unable to be bridged.
Dissertation

Officers not gentlemen: officers commissioned from the ranks of the pre-First World War British regular army, 1903-1918

Roger Deeks
TL;DR: In this paper, the emergence of the ranker officer identity, progressively defined during the war through a process of Othering in terms of socio-cultural differences, particularly presentation and speech, was examined for the first time.