“As the origin of the discipline of geology, and as one of the oldest landmasses on earth, Scotland is emblematic of the ancient forces by which the earth has been shaped long before the advent of humanity and its belief in the progress of history.” HumanityHistoryProgressScotlandGeologyDeep Time Book:The International Companion to the Scottish Novel Source: The International Companion to the Scottish Novel
“What happened in Scotland in the 1960s and the 1970s and what laid the foundation for the enormous creative achievements of the 1980s was the liberation of the voice. The Scottish voice declared its independence. The liberation of the voice was at first the acceptance of and an assertion of the vernacular. But the real liberation of the voice came not from the assertion of the rights of the vernacular itself, but from the assertion of the right to move without boundaries between the vernacular and standard English, between the demotic and the literary.” ScotlandLiteraryVernacular1970s1980sScottish CultureStandard EnglishDemoticScottish Voice Book:Out of History: Narrative Paradigms in Scottish and British Culture Source: Out of History: Narrative Paradigms in Scottish and British Culture
“Scotland had no need of a 'resistant nationalism' precisely because it was an imperial nation engaged in projecting its national culture to the world. The historical problem of Scotland's 'absent nationalism' in the nineteenth century is a non-problem because far from lacking a nationalism, Scottish nationalism was vigorously engaged on imposing itself wherever Scots had achieved a determining or a significant role within the territory of the British Empire. Scottish nationalism did not need to assert itself within the British state because the 'world was its field', and its aim was to make Scotland the spiritual core of the imperial project.” ScotlandBritish EmpireScottish Nationalism Book:The Wealth of the Nation: Scotland, Culture and Independence Source: The Wealth of the Nation: Scotland, Culture and Independence
“The attempt to separate Lowland from Highland Scotland ignores the extent to which Lowland Scots are the descendants of Highlanders, and how many Lowland Scots, like Nan Shepherd, made the country's mountains the focus of their spiritual aspirations. 'Highlandism' is not simply the ersatz adoption of a stereotypical version of Scottish culture which is entirely unconnected with the reality of modern Scottish life: the Highlands are both the geographical and the historical backdrop with which 'Lowland' Scottish culture interacts.” HighlandsScottish CultureLowlands Book:The Wealth of the Nation: Scotland, Culture and Independence Source: The Wealth of the Nation: Scotland, Culture and Independence
“Scott and Terry created a political theatre in which a Hanovarian English monarch could appear on the stage of Edinburgh to act the part of a Stuart king.” ScotlandWalter ScottGeorge IvDaniel Terry Book:The Wealth of the Nation: Scotland, Culture and Independence Source: The Wealth of the Nation: Scotland, Culture and Independence