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From Tartan to Tartanry: Scottish Culture, History and Myth

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An historically and critically sound - and contemporary - evaluation of tartan and tartanry based on proper contextualisation and coherent analysis. This critical re-evaluation of one of the more controversial aspects of recent debates on Scottish culture draws together contributions from leading researchers in a wide variety of disciplines, resulting in a highly accessible yet authoritative volume.

This book, like tartan, weaves together two strands. The first, like a warp, considers the significance of tartan in Scottish history and culture during the last four centuries, including tartan's role in the development of diaspora identities in North America. The second, like a weft, considers the place of tartan and rise of tartanry in the national and international representations of Scottishness, including heritage, historical myth-making, popular culture, music hall, literature, film, comedy, rock and pop music, sport and 'high' culture.

From Tartan to Tartanry offers fresh insight into and new perspectives on key cultural phenomena, from the iconic role of the Scottish regiments to the role of tartan in rock music. It argues that tartan may be fun, but it also plays a wide range of fascinating, important and valuable roles in Scottish and international culture.

288 pages, Hardcover

First published November 15, 2010

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About the author

Ian Brown

26 books1 follower
Ian Brown is a Scottish playwright, poet and freelance scholar. He is General Editor of The Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature (EUP: 2007) and series editor of The Edinburgh Companions to Scottish Literature, co-editing the volume on the twentieth century (2009) and on drama (2011). He publishes on theatrical, literary and cultural topics and is a visiting professor at Glasgow and Glamorgan Universities.

In 1977, Brown worked for the British Council in Istanbul.

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