Skip to content
10% OFF EVERYTHING when you spend £20 - Use Code: RWMAR10 - Must end Wednesday 1st 9am
10% OFF EVERYTHING when you spend £20 - Use Code: RWMAR10 - Ends Wednesday 9am

The Caledoniad

Catriona M.M. MacDonald

The Making of Scottish History

Barcode 9780859767200
Hardback

Original price £92.04 - Original price £92.04
Original price
£92.04
£92.04 - £92.04
Current price £92.04

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
in stock
FREE shipping

Release Date: 17/10/2024

Genre: Home & Garden
Sub-Genre: Local History & Genealogy
Label: John Donald
Language: English
Publisher: Birlinn General

The Making of Scottish History

Scottish history is not simply the distillation of Scotland’s past: authors shape what we know and how we judge our forebears. This book investigates who decided which Scottish voices of the past would be heard in history’s pages and which would ultimately be silenced. An essential landmark text for all undergraduate Scottish history programmes.


Winner of the 2025 Frank Watson Book Prize

Why did Scots in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries know so little about their past and even less about those who controlled their history? Is the historical narrative the only legitimate medium through which the past can be made known? Are novelists and historians as far apart as convention has it? In an age when history grounds any claims to national status, these are important questions and they have implications for how Scottish history has evolved, and how Scottish identity has been understood up to the present day.

Scottish history is not simply the distillation of Scotland’s past: authors shape what we know and how we judge our forebears. This book investigates who decided which Scottish voices of the past would be heard in history’s pages and which would ultimately be silenced. It sketches a picture of a narrow and privileged cultural elite that responded belatedly to a more democratic age and only slowly embraced women writers and the interests of ‘average’ Scots. Integrating historical fiction and popular histories in its appreciation of the Scottish historical imaginary, it most importantly tells the story of why, despite the interests of politicians and others, a truly British history has never emerged.

'A brilliant, scholarly yet highly readable work which enlarges our understanding of what Scottish history is, and reinforces why it really matters' - James Robertson