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  • Cited by 19
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
February 2018
Print publication year:
2018
Online ISBN:
9781108344043

Book description

People have always attached meaning to the landscape that surrounds them. In Storied Ground Paul Readman uncovers why landscape matters so much to the English people, exploring its particular importance in shaping English national identity amid the transformations of modernity. The book takes us from the fells of the Lake District to the uplands of Northumberland; from the streetscapes of industrial Manchester to the heart of London. This panoramic journey reveals the significance, not only of the physical characteristics of landscapes, but also of the sense of the past, collective memories and cultural traditions that give these places their meaning. Between the late eighteenth and early twentieth centuries, Englishness extended far beyond the pastoral idyll of chocolate-box thatched cottages, waving fields of corn and quaint country churches. It was found in diverse locations - urban as well as rural, north as well as south - and it took strikingly diverse forms.

Reviews

'Paul Readman argues convincingly that other scholars have neglected the importance of the lived environment in shaping cultural nationalism, focusing too heavily on written histories and commemorative events and activities … Readman’s monograph is a tour de force, wide ranging and convincing in its central arguments.'

Rosemary Michell Source: American Historical Review

'Fascinating … Storied Ground is a richly rewarding, thoughtful book. Readman’s extensive knowledge and scholarship enable him to extend our understanding of the ways in which perceptions of English national identity were powerfully mediated through local historical associations and regional culture, but the clarity and accessibility of his writing should also win him readers well beyond an academic audience.'

Barry Sloan Source: Victorian Studies

'Storied Ground considers six powerful landscapes of modern Englishness. Two are border countries. Two are places of outstanding national beauty. Two are towns, giving Readman the opportunity to think again about English ruralism. This is a compelling study of England profound, a vital subject in these Brexit times.'

Robert Colls - author of George Orwell: English Rebel

'Storied Ground offers a vital account of how shifting attitudes towards landscape helped develop English and British national identities and democratic culture in the long nineteenth century. Preservationism in all its variety emerges as a radical and democratic agenda predicated on the notion that landscape was a ‘national possession’. An important book, richly-documented and historiographically significant.'

Matthew Kelly - author of Quartz and Feldspar. Dartmoor: A British Landscape in Modern Times

'Following an introduction that explores the picturesque, symbolic, and heritage associations of’ ‘storied ground’ with place, the focus shifts to the theme of the shaping of English identity. Six regional studies are set in the long nineteenth century from the French Revolution (1789) to WWI (1914), when mythic rural homelands were important in an age of urbanization, industrialization, and modernity … A conclusion offers a rich reprise of the ‘multifarious ways’ landscape contributed to English national identity before 1914. Its forty figures, 200 references, and over 1,000 footnotes make Storied Ground a foundational source in landscape and identity studies. Highly recommended.'

B. Osborne Source: Choice

'Given the recent controversies surrounding immigration and Brexit, this timely enquiry into the shaping of English national identity is supremely relevant … stimulating and authoritative …'

Paul Elliott Source: Environmental History

'Wide-ranging and stimulating … well-written and strongly recommended …'

John A. Hargreaves Source: The Historian

'Pleasant to read, vivid and precisely argued … extremely worth reading.'

Andreas Fahrmeir Source: Historische Zeitschrift

'This impressively researched and finely written study … is a lively and stimulating book, bursting with fresh insights into the relationship between people and landscapes.'

Angus Winchester Source: Reviews in History

'This stimulating and rewarding book, by a scholar who has made the study of the relationship between landscape, history and English national identity his own … makes some important and [long-overdue] arguments … [and contains] many bold but courteously-expressed challenges to historiographical orthodoxy …'

Jeremy Burchardt Source: Environment and History

‘… excellent … illuminating … The result is not an overburdened text suitable only for scholars, but a readable, persuasive reconstruction of projects of national identity formation … Scholars from a variety of disciplines will find interest and revelations in Storied Ground: history, literary studies, political science, rhetoric, art history, and environmental studies are just the most obvious fields where this fine study will produce new directions and further nuances in scholarship and teaching. But … the audience for Paul Readman’s book extends well beyond the academy. General readers with interests in local histories, in English history writ large, in literature, in travel and tourism, will all find food for thought here - and the pleasures of shapely prose, occasionally touched with wry humour and suffused with learning.'

Anne D. Wallace Source: Nineteenth-Century Contexts

'Paul Readman’s Storied Ground … will become the standard reference point for those concerned with English landscape and national identity in the long nineteenth century … each chapter provides rich, original and nuanced analysis.'

David Matless Source: Agricultural History Review

'Insightful, original, and gracefully written … This book should be of great interest to historians and art historians, as well as those interested in tourism, historical preservation, and the construction of national identities. It is both scholarly and accessible, a model of interdisciplinary scholarship.'

Jeffrey Auerbach Source: Journal of Interdisciplinary History

'Those familiar with Paul Readman’s previous work on landscape and its significance will turn with enthusiasm to his latest volume, the fruit of research in the library and in the field … Readman is an engaging and convivial guide … Using a wide range of source material, from periodical articles to popular song … he gives new insights into areas that are staples of landscape and open space histories, the New Forest and Lake District for example, and opens up less familiar landscapes, notably Manchester … I warmly commend this book. It is attractively written and illustrated, reasonably priced, and light enough to be a good companion in the field as well as intellectually weighty enough to be compelling reading in the library.'

Elizabeth Baigent Source: Rural History

'… a pleasure to read … Given our post-Brexit national dissensus, Readman's study is timely in its insistence on a more nuanced view of English cultural nationalism.'

Caroline Edwards Source: Times Higher Education

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Contents

  • Introduction
    pp 1-22

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