Lost in the Backwoods
Scots and the North American Wilderness
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Published:14th May '13
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

How the American wilderness shaped Scottish experience, imagination and identity How is the Scottish imagination shaped by its émigré experience with wilderness and the extreme? Drawing on journals, emigrant guides, memoirs, letters, poetry and fiction, this book examines patterns of survival, defeat, adaptation and response in North America's harshest landscapes. Most Scots who crossed the Atlantic in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries encountered the practical, moral and cultural challenges of the wilderness, with its many tensions and contradictions. Jenni Calder explores the effect of these experiences on the Scots imagination. Associated with displacement and disappearance, the 'wilderness' was also a source of adventure and redemption, of exploitation and spiritual regeneration, of freedom and restriction. An arena of greed, cruelty and cannibalism, of courage, generosity and mutual understanding, it brought out the best and the worst of humanity. Did the Scots who emigrated exchange one extreme for another, or did they discover a new idea of identity, freedom and landscape? Key Features: The book draws on a wide range of Scottish, Canadian and US source materialIlluminates overlooked aspects of the Scottish diaspora experience Extends the frontiers of Scottish historyRelates to current political, cultural and genealogical concerns
This book … does little more than sketch out the boundaries of a new field of academic endeavour … future generations will no doubt reap the benefits. -- Roger Cox * The Scotsman *
< -- James Hunter, Emeritus Professor of History, UHI
ISBN: 9780748647392
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 551g
256 pages