The image of the Highland Clearances, c. 1880-1990
Abstract
The Highland Clearances have featured in many historical
analyses over the past thirty years and have particularly attracted
the attention of socio-economic historians interested in the study
of agricultural changes, their causes and multi-faceted impact on
the Highland region and society. Yet it seems that the
increasingly refined knowledge that the period now enjoys has
hardly percolated down to the popular interpretation given of the
events.
The present study concerns itself with the popular
representations of the Highland Clearances which, to a large
extent, are consensual and are revealing of the collective
attitudes towards the period, especially in the crofting districts.
The first part concentrates on the historiographical background of
the period since the nineteenth century, so as to establish the
fund of knowledge gradually accumulated on the times, the
standpoints adopted by the various historical currents and the
evolution in historical methods and perspective. To convey the
collective perception on the Clearances, three areas are selected:
twentieth-century Scottish fiction, political writings and the
museum world. Through the individual analysis of each, the themes,
elements and viewpoints which have been given priority, will
emerge.
The popular representation of the Clearances yields as much
information on the way people see their past as on current
attitudes and concerns since it is, more often than not, recycled
to fit a particular reading. It is also, because of its
consistency and its recurrence, a mark of the significance of the
period in the collective memory and sense of identity of the
inhabitants of the crofting districts.
Type
Thesis, PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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