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This is a pioneering study of the phenomenon of vibration and its
history and reception through culture. The study of the senses has
become a rich topic in recent years. "Senses of Vibration" explores
a wide range of sensory experience and makes a decisive new
contribution to this growing field by focussing not simply on the
senses as such, but on the material experience - vibration - that
underpins them. This is the first book to take the theme of
vibration as central, offering an interdisciplinary history of the
phenomenon and its reverberations in the cultural imaginary. It
tracks vibration through the work of a wide range of writers,
including physiologists (who thought vibrations in the nerves
delivered sensations to the brain), physicists (who claimed that
light, heat, electricity and other forms of energy were vibratory),
spiritualists (who figured that spiritual energies also existed in
vibratory form), and poets and novelists from Coleridge to Dickens
and Wells. "Senses of Vibration" is a work of scholarship that cuts
through a range of disciplines and will reverberate for many years
to come.
Mysticism, Myth and Celtic Identity explores how the mythical and
mystical past informs national imaginations. Building on notions of
invented tradition and myths of the nation, it looks at the power
of narrative and fiction to shape identity, with particular
reference to the British and Celtic contexts. The authors consider
how aspects of the past are reinterpreted or reimagined in a
variety of ways to give coherence to desired national groupings, or
groups aspiring to nationhood and its 'defence'. The coverage is
unusually broad in its historical sweep, dealing with work from
prehistory to the contemporary, with a particular emphasis on the
period from the eighteenth century to the present. The subject
matter includes notions of ancient deities, Druids, Celticity, the
archaeological remains of pagan religions, traditional folk tales,
racial and religious myths and ethnic politics, and the different
types of returns and hauntings that can recycle these ideas in
culture. Innovative and interdisciplinary, the scholarship in
Mysticism, Myth and Celtic Identity is mainly literary but also
geographical and historical and draws on religious studies,
politics and the social sciences. Thus the collection offers a
stimulatingly broad number of new viewpoints on a matter of great
topical relevance: national identity and the politicization of its
myths.
Mysticism, Myth and Celtic Identity explores how the mythical and
mystical past informs national imaginations. Building on notions of
invented tradition and myths of the nation, it looks at the power
of narrative and fiction to shape identity, with particular
reference to the British and Celtic contexts. The authors consider
how aspects of the past are reinterpreted or reimagined in a
variety of ways to give coherence to desired national groupings, or
groups aspiring to nationhood and its 'defence'. The coverage is
unusually broad in its historical sweep, dealing with work from
prehistory to the contemporary, with a particular emphasis on the
period from the eighteenth century to the present. The subject
matter includes notions of ancient deities, Druids, Celticity, the
archaeological remains of pagan religions, traditional folk tales,
racial and religious myths and ethnic politics, and the different
types of returns and hauntings that can recycle these ideas in
culture. Innovative and interdisciplinary, the scholarship in
Mysticism, Myth and Celtic Identity is mainly literary but also
geographical and historical and draws on religious studies,
politics and the social sciences. Thus the collection offers a
stimulatingly broad number of new viewpoints on a matter of great
topical relevance: national identity and the politicization of its
myths.
The concept that oral history can give voice to people or allow
"hidden voices" to become part of history is one of its most
celebrated achievements. However, the standard practice of
transcribing or summarizing interviews has meant that oral
historians have had to grapple with questions of how to translate
the oral into written form. What is lost or gained during this
process of mediation? These re-creations can be wonderful and
illuminating works of scholarship and art, and this book explores a
wide range of the different forms they have taken-from John and
Alan Lomax's transcriptions of African American songs for the
Federal Writers Project to Svetlana Alexievich's polyphonic novels.
Such works can give their subjects the necessary latitude to convey
their narratives on their own terms, but there is also, always, the
danger that their voices will be distorted or lost during the
process of mediation. Sound Writing offers a thorough review of the
varying arguments about editing for transcription and publication
and reflects on how digital technologies enable much wider access
to "raw" oral data. It examines how oral histories are co-created
by speakers, the authors who mediate them, and readers, and it
brings into sharp focus questions about how memory takes on
subjective, narrative form. Finally, it examines the interplay
between written literature and sound recordings, or orality, using
a diverse range of examples-from the work of William Wordsworth and
George Ewart Evans to Studs Terkel, Alex Haley, Luisa Passerini,
Amrit Wilson, and Stacy Zembrzycki. As an interdisciplinary study,
Sound Writing takes a broad approach to the written word to
encompass not only transcriptions and other texts derived from oral
history interviews but also literary precursors such as epic poetry
and folklore, along with various related textual forms such as
biography, autobiography, and blogs. It argues that the recording
of oral traditions in print by poets, folklorists, anthropologists,
and postcolonial writers is comparable to practices of recording,
transcribing, and publishing familiar to oral historians. Literary
genres have long influenced oral history narratives, and, in turn,
oral history has helped shape literary forms.
Rocks of nation reveals how the imagination of nations and races is
grounded in the landscape. In doing so, it makes a striking
contribution to theories of nation, offering new insights into how
national identity is bound up with materiality. The book provides
an in-depth case study of Cornwall and its economy in the wider
context of Britain and the rise of nationalist politics, especially
in England (UKIP) and Scotland (SNP). Spanning from the early
nineteenth to the twenty-first century, it traces the gradual
formation of a cultural consciousness of Cornwall as a
distinctively rocky nation through a wide range of literatures,
including nineteenth-century geological journals and folklore,
Gothic and detective fiction, modernist and romance novels, travel
narratives, 'New Age' eco-spiritualism and Cornish nationalist
writings. Rocks of nation will be of interest to students and
academics across the disciplines, from English literature and
cultural geography to Celtic studies, history and politics. -- .
This is a pioneering study of the phenomenon of vibration and its
history and reception through culture. The study of the senses has
become a rich topic in recent years. "Senses of Vibration" explores
a wide range of sensory experience and makes a decisive new
contribution to this growing field by focusing not simply on the
senses as such, but on the material experience - vibration - that
underpins them. This is the first book to take the theme of
vibration as central, offering an interdisciplinary history of the
phenomenon and its reverberations in the cultural imaginary. It
tracks vibration through the work of a wide range of writers,
including physiologists (who thought vibrations in the nerves
delivered sensations to the brain), physicists (who claimed that
light, heat, electricity and other forms of energy were vibratory),
spiritualists (who figured that spiritual energies also existed in
vibratory form), and poets and novelists from Coleridge to Dickens
and Wells. "Senses of Vibration" is a work of scholarship that cuts
through a range of disciplines and will reverberate for many years
to come.
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