Writers’ houses constitute the largest and oldest segment of historic house museums dedicated to famous persons in the United Kingdom. Litterateurs tend to ascribe ‘lit houses’ to the ineffable magic of readers’ connections to writers. By contrast, my analysis deploys the analytic of cultural politics to suggest that writers’ house museums can more fully be understood as assertions of national identity. The elision of language with national distinction is subliminal in everyday life, but can be brought to prominence by historicising the nations of the British Isles, and the practice of writing in English
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Scrutiny2: issues in E...
This response to Peggy Levitt’s book Artifacts and Allegiances argues that, as cultural institutions...
Literature has long played a crucial role in constructing and disseminating what Benedict Anderson t...
National Cultures construct identities by producing meanings about the nation with which we can iden...
By exploring case studies from the UK, this paper investigates how post-writer histories of literary...
This thesis takes as its starting in point an examination of the complex and contested construction ...
In his recent contribution to the debates about English and British identities 'The Making of Englis...
Literature can, in its material (books, writer’s house, etc.) as immaterial aspects (imaginary of pl...
'Representing the Nation' gathers key writings from leading thinkers in cultural studies, cultural h...
Many social theorists have suggested that we are currently living in a period in which the identitie...
Many wise academics have written many great books about heritage. They discuss what heritage is, how...
The historic house museum exemplifies the enormous power of the museum idea to make specimens out of...
The aim of the thesis is to explore the potential that literature can have in studying mechanisms of...
In the past I have explored the role of discourse with reference to heritage policy in the British c...
Generally speaking, museums can be defined as places where collections of a specific importance and ...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Scrutiny2: issues in E...
This response to Peggy Levitt’s book Artifacts and Allegiances argues that, as cultural institutions...
Literature has long played a crucial role in constructing and disseminating what Benedict Anderson t...
National Cultures construct identities by producing meanings about the nation with which we can iden...
By exploring case studies from the UK, this paper investigates how post-writer histories of literary...
This thesis takes as its starting in point an examination of the complex and contested construction ...
In his recent contribution to the debates about English and British identities 'The Making of Englis...
Literature can, in its material (books, writer’s house, etc.) as immaterial aspects (imaginary of pl...
'Representing the Nation' gathers key writings from leading thinkers in cultural studies, cultural h...
Many social theorists have suggested that we are currently living in a period in which the identitie...
Many wise academics have written many great books about heritage. They discuss what heritage is, how...
The historic house museum exemplifies the enormous power of the museum idea to make specimens out of...
The aim of the thesis is to explore the potential that literature can have in studying mechanisms of...
In the past I have explored the role of discourse with reference to heritage policy in the British c...
Generally speaking, museums can be defined as places where collections of a specific importance and ...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Scrutiny2: issues in E...
This response to Peggy Levitt’s book Artifacts and Allegiances argues that, as cultural institutions...
Literature has long played a crucial role in constructing and disseminating what Benedict Anderson t...