Rocks of Nation: The Imagination of Celtic Cornwall
By (Author) Shelley Trower
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
17th July 2015
United Kingdom
Hardback
272
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
Rocks of nation reveals how the imagination of nations and races is grounded in the landscape. In doing so, it makes a striking contribution to theories of nation, offering new insights into how national identity is bound up with materiality. The book provides an in-depth case study of Cornwall and its economy in the wider context of Britain and the rise of nationalist politics, especially in England (UKIP) and Scotland (SNP). Spanning from the early nineteenth to the twenty-first century, it traces the gradual formation of a cultural consciousness of Cornwall as a distinctively rocky nation through a wide range of literatures, including nineteenth-century geological journals and folklore, Gothic and detective fiction, modernist and romance novels, travel narratives, 'New Age' eco-spiritualism and Cornish nationalist writings. Rocks of nation will be of interest to students and academics across the disciplines, from English literature and cultural geography to Celtic studies, history and politics. -- .
Does the land beneath our feet define us Do place have inherent meaning, and if so where do those meanings come from Shelley Trower's exciting new study, Rocks of Nation, brings together poetry and fiction with geology, folklore, the Gothic, Celtic mysticism and nationalist identity, to offer a long view on Cornwall and the literature of place.
Liz Edwards, University of Wales Centre for Advanced Welsh and Celtic Studies,
National Library of Wales, British Society for Literature and Science
Shelley Trower is Lecturer in English at the University of Roehampton