Obituary: 1899 |
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Authors: | Charles W.J. Withers |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Geography , University of Edinburgh , Drummond Street, Edinburgh , EH8 9XP |
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Abstract: | Work by historians, geographers and others has examined the role of memory and of commemoration in understanding social meaning and identity. Memory has been shown to be an active constituent of the ways in which meaning is invested in space and place. This paper examines the appeal to memory in Donald MacLeod's Gloomy Memories in the Highlands of Scotland, a text written to understand social and geographical change in the nineteenth‐century Scottish Highlands and, in revised form, to counter the alternative views expressed in Harriet Beecher Stowe's Sunny Memories. In discussing MacLeod's use of memory in Highland history and with reference to examples of memory's use in texts and other representations, the paper contributes to debates on how memory ‘works’ in geography and in history. |
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Keywords: | memory landscape Scottish Highlands history |
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