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Title From tartan to tartanry : Scottish culture, history and myth / edited by Ian Brown.
Publication Info Edinburgh : Edinburgh University Press, c2010.



Descript vi, 278 p. : ill., ports.
Contents Introduction: Tartan, tartanry and hybridity, Ian Brown; 1: 'Scarlet tartans would be got ...': the Re-invention of Tradition, Hugh Cheape; 2: Plaiding the Invention of Scotland, Murray Pittock; 3: From David Stewart to Andy Stewart: The Invention of the Scottish Soldier, Trevor Royle; 4: Paying for the plaid: Scottish Gaelic identity politics in nineteenth-century North America, Michael Newton; 5: Tartanry into tartan: heritage, tourism and material culture, Ian Maitland Hume; 6: Myth, political caricature and monstering the tartan, Ian Brown; 7: Tartanry and its Discontents: the Idea of Popular Scottishness, Alan Riach; 8: 'Wha's like us?': ethnic representation in music hall and popular theatre and the remaking of urban Scottish society, Paul Maloney; 9: Literary tartanry as translation, Susanne Hagemann; 10: Looking at tartan in film: history, identity and spectacle, Richard Butt; 11: Tartan comics and comic tartanry, Margaret Munro; 12: Rock, pop and tartanry, J. Mark Percival; 13: Class warriors or generous men in skirts?: the Tartan Army in the Scottish and foreign press, Hugh O'Donnell; 14: Don't take the High Road: tartanry and its critics, David Goldie.
Note 400 annual accesses. UkHlHU
ISBN 9780748644490 (e-book)
Click on the terms below to find similar items in the catalogue
Subject Tartans -- Social aspects -- Scotland.
Tartans -- Scotland -- History.
Nationalism -- Scotland.
Popular culture -- Scotland -- History.
Scotland -- Civilization.
Alt author Brown, Ian, 1951-
Descript vi, 278 p. : ill., ports.
Contents Introduction: Tartan, tartanry and hybridity, Ian Brown; 1: 'Scarlet tartans would be got ...': the Re-invention of Tradition, Hugh Cheape; 2: Plaiding the Invention of Scotland, Murray Pittock; 3: From David Stewart to Andy Stewart: The Invention of the Scottish Soldier, Trevor Royle; 4: Paying for the plaid: Scottish Gaelic identity politics in nineteenth-century North America, Michael Newton; 5: Tartanry into tartan: heritage, tourism and material culture, Ian Maitland Hume; 6: Myth, political caricature and monstering the tartan, Ian Brown; 7: Tartanry and its Discontents: the Idea of Popular Scottishness, Alan Riach; 8: 'Wha's like us?': ethnic representation in music hall and popular theatre and the remaking of urban Scottish society, Paul Maloney; 9: Literary tartanry as translation, Susanne Hagemann; 10: Looking at tartan in film: history, identity and spectacle, Richard Butt; 11: Tartan comics and comic tartanry, Margaret Munro; 12: Rock, pop and tartanry, J. Mark Percival; 13: Class warriors or generous men in skirts?: the Tartan Army in the Scottish and foreign press, Hugh O'Donnell; 14: Don't take the High Road: tartanry and its critics, David Goldie.
Note 400 annual accesses. UkHlHU
ISBN 9780748644490 (e-book)
Subject Tartans -- Social aspects -- Scotland.
Tartans -- Scotland -- History.
Nationalism -- Scotland.
Popular culture -- Scotland -- History.
Scotland -- Civilization.
Alt author Brown, Ian, 1951-

Subject Tartans -- Social aspects -- Scotland.
Tartans -- Scotland -- History.
Nationalism -- Scotland.
Popular culture -- Scotland -- History.
Scotland -- Civilization.
Descript vi, 278 p. : ill., ports.
Contents Introduction: Tartan, tartanry and hybridity, Ian Brown; 1: 'Scarlet tartans would be got ...': the Re-invention of Tradition, Hugh Cheape; 2: Plaiding the Invention of Scotland, Murray Pittock; 3: From David Stewart to Andy Stewart: The Invention of the Scottish Soldier, Trevor Royle; 4: Paying for the plaid: Scottish Gaelic identity politics in nineteenth-century North America, Michael Newton; 5: Tartanry into tartan: heritage, tourism and material culture, Ian Maitland Hume; 6: Myth, political caricature and monstering the tartan, Ian Brown; 7: Tartanry and its Discontents: the Idea of Popular Scottishness, Alan Riach; 8: 'Wha's like us?': ethnic representation in music hall and popular theatre and the remaking of urban Scottish society, Paul Maloney; 9: Literary tartanry as translation, Susanne Hagemann; 10: Looking at tartan in film: history, identity and spectacle, Richard Butt; 11: Tartan comics and comic tartanry, Margaret Munro; 12: Rock, pop and tartanry, J. Mark Percival; 13: Class warriors or generous men in skirts?: the Tartan Army in the Scottish and foreign press, Hugh O'Donnell; 14: Don't take the High Road: tartanry and its critics, David Goldie.
Note 400 annual accesses. UkHlHU
Alt author Brown, Ian, 1951-
ISBN 9780748644490 (e-book)

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