This study of Scottish culture and politics since the Union of 1707, has been extensively rewritten to bring the story up-to-date and to draw on the remarkable output of Scottish historians and writers in the 1980s. Beneath the political level, but interacting with it, Harvie sees the evolution of a civic republicanism which, unless checked by real measures of federalism, renders the future of the Union unpromising.
Professor Christopher Harvie is a Scottish historian and author. He was Professor of British and Irish Studies at the University of Tübingen, Germany and a Scottish National Party Member of the Scottish Parliament for Mid Scotland and Fife from 2007 to 2011.
Harvie grew up in the Borders village of St. Boswells and was educated at Kelso High School and the Royal High School in Edinburgh. He studied at the University of Edinburgh, where he graduated in 1966 with a First Class Honours M.A. in History. He received his PhD from Edinburgh in 1972 for a thesis on university liberalism and democracy, 1860-1886.
As a historian, Harvie was the Shaw-Macfie Lang Fellow and a tutor at Edinburgh University from 1966 to 1969. He joined the Open University in 1969 as a history lecturer, and from 1978 he was a senior lecturer in history.
His publications include Scotland and Nationalism (1977, revised 1994), Fool’s Gold: the Story of North Sea Oil (1994), Broonland: the Last Days of Gordon Brown (2010), and Scotland the Brief: a Short History of a Nation (2010).
i would add more relevant details but it is such a complete pain adding books on Goodreads this will probably never have the correct cover or isbn though is the updated (and possibly most recent) published version of this text, bought in Galloway & Porters closing down sale. One of the oldest bookshops in Cambridge, sadly no longer here, where I bought all my degree texts 30 years ago. Progress, pah!
The book wasn't overly useful to me. The parts I read seemed very focused on the SNP rather than nationalism as I'd wanted. I got a few quotes from the chapters that I read, but as I'm finding with most books on nationalism, it is dated.