
British Identities before Nationalism: Ethnicity and Nationhood in the Atlantic World, 1600–1800
Cambridge University Press, 3/25/1999
EAN 9780521624039, ISBN10: 0521624037
Hardcover, 312 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.1 cm
Language: English
Inspired by debates among political scientists over the strength and depth of the pre-modern roots of nationalism, this study attempts to gauge the status of ethnic identities in an era whose dominant loyalties and modes of political argument were confessional, institutional and juridical. Colin Kidd's point of departure is the widely shared orthodox belief that the whole world had been peopled by the offspring of Noah. In addition, Kidd probes inconsistencies in national myths of origin and ancient constitutional claims, and considers points of contact which existed in the early modern era between ethnic identities which are now viewed as antithetical, including those of Celts and Saxons. He also argues that Gothicism qualified the notorious Francophobia of eighteenth-century Britons. A wide-ranging example of the new British history, this study draws upon evidence from England, Scotland, Ireland and America, while remaining alert to European comparisons and influences.
Acknowledgements
1. Introduction
Part I. Theological Contexts
2. Prologue
the mosaic foundations of early modern British identity
3. Ethnic theology and British identities
Part II. The Three Kingdoms
4. Whose ancient constitution? Ethnicity and the English past, 1600–c. 1790
5. Britons, Saxons and the Anglican quest for legitimacy
6. The Gaelic dilemma in early modern Scottish political culture
7. The weave of Irish identities, 1600–c. 1790
Part III. Points of Contact
8. Constructing the pre-romantic Celt
9. Mapping a Gothic Europe
10. The varieties of Gothicism in the British Atlantic world, 1689–c. 1790
11. Conclusion
Index.