Mediating Cultural Memory is the first book to analyze the relationship between cultural memory, national identity and the changing media ecology in early eighteenth-century Britain. Leith Davis focuses on five pivotal episodes in the histories of England, Scotland and Ireland: the 1688 'Glorious' Revolution; the War of the Two Kings in Ireland (1688-91); the Scottish colonial enterprise in Darien (1695-1700); the 1715 Jacobite Rising; and the 1745 Jacobite Rising. She explores the initial inscription of these episodes in forms such as ballads, official documents, manuscript newsletters, correspondence, newspapers and popular histories, and examines how counter-memories of these events continued to circulate in later mediations. Bringing together Memory Studies, Book History and British Studies, Mediating Cultural Memory offers a new interpretation of the early eighteenth century as a crucial stage in the development of cultural memory and illuminates the processes of remembrance and forgetting that have shaped the nation of Britain.
Papildus informācija
The first book to analyze the interplay of cultural memory, politics and the changing media ecology of early eighteenth-century Britain.
List of Figures; Acknowledgments; Introduction;
1. Of documents and
declarations: Mediating the 1688 revolution;
2. Remembering to forget:
Ireland, the war of the two kings and cultural amnesia;
3. National
correspondences: Print, letters and the company of Scotland's Darien
expedition;
4. Writing the 1715 Jacobite rising: Periodical networks and the
inscription of news;
5. Reading the 1745 Jacobite rising: 'Transitory
news-papers,' 'Fleeting pamphlets' and Knots of cultural memory; Conclusion:
'Living on' after 1745: From cultural memory to the memory of culture;
Bibliography.
Leith Davis is the author of Acts of Union: Scotland and the Negotiation of the British Nation, 1707-1832 (1998) and Music, Postcolonialism and Gender: The Construction of Irish Identity, 1724-1874 (2005), and is co-editor of Scotland and the Borders of Romanticism (2004) and Robert Burns and Transatlantic Culture (2012).