SoSe 19: PS-Introduction to Cultural Studies II: Scottish Independence
Cordula Lemke
Kommentar
Today's image of Scotland is still dominated by the myth of peaty and moss-covered Highlands and their tartan-wearing hospitable inhabitants who entertain weary travellers with tales of ghosts and murderers. These apparently authentic traditions can often be traced back to the need to invent a Scottish national identity that was and still is used to claim independence. Not only have these inventions found their way into the novels of the time, but writers like Robert Burns, Walter Scott and Lewis Grassic Gibbons can indeed be seen as the source of this mythical image of Scotland. In this seminar we will look at the myths these writers employ and construct, at how these inventions affect the image of a Scottish nation striving for independence and at the traces they leave in today's cultural productions of a globalised age.
Texts: Walter Scott, Waverley Lewis Grassic Gibbons, The Sunset Song Iain Banks, Espedair Street Schließen13 Termine
Regelmäßige Termine der Lehrveranstaltung