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Chapter
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Contents
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Acknowledgements viii
- Notes on the Contributors ix
- Foreword xi
- Introduction: Scottish Highlands and the Atlantic World: Social Networks and Identities 1
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PART ONE Land
- 1 ‘I prefer to establish myself in my own colony’: The Translation of Aristocratic Thinking on Land and Governance between Highland Scotland and Atlantic Canada, c. 1803–1910 15
- 2 Tripped up by Tartan: Settler Colonialism and the Highland Scots on Cape Breton Island 31
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PART TWO Language and Culture
- 3 Gaelic Heritage, Language Revitalisation and Identity in Present-day Nova Scotia 47
- 4 ‘Drochaid eadar mis’ agus mo dhùthaich’ [‘A bridge between me and my country’]: Transatlantic Networks and the Nineteenth-century Gaelic Periodical Press 71
- 5 The Scottish Highlands and Warfare in the British Atlantic World, c. 1740–1815 91
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PART THREE Networks of Empowerment and Oppression
- 6 Christian Robertson (1780–1842) and a Highland Network in the Caribbean: A Study of Complicity 115
- 7 The Gaelic Club of Glasgow: Gateway from the Scottish Highlands to the British Atlantic World, 1780–1838 148
- 8 Family, Society and Highland Identity in an Industrial World 170
- Epilogue: Contested Boundaries – Documenting the Socio-cultural Dimensions of Empire 195
- Index 200
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Illustrations vii
- Acknowledgements viii
- Notes on the Contributors ix
- Foreword xi
- Introduction: Scottish Highlands and the Atlantic World: Social Networks and Identities 1
-
PART ONE Land
- 1 ‘I prefer to establish myself in my own colony’: The Translation of Aristocratic Thinking on Land and Governance between Highland Scotland and Atlantic Canada, c. 1803–1910 15
- 2 Tripped up by Tartan: Settler Colonialism and the Highland Scots on Cape Breton Island 31
-
PART TWO Language and Culture
- 3 Gaelic Heritage, Language Revitalisation and Identity in Present-day Nova Scotia 47
- 4 ‘Drochaid eadar mis’ agus mo dhùthaich’ [‘A bridge between me and my country’]: Transatlantic Networks and the Nineteenth-century Gaelic Periodical Press 71
- 5 The Scottish Highlands and Warfare in the British Atlantic World, c. 1740–1815 91
-
PART THREE Networks of Empowerment and Oppression
- 6 Christian Robertson (1780–1842) and a Highland Network in the Caribbean: A Study of Complicity 115
- 7 The Gaelic Club of Glasgow: Gateway from the Scottish Highlands to the British Atlantic World, 1780–1838 148
- 8 Family, Society and Highland Identity in an Industrial World 170
- Epilogue: Contested Boundaries – Documenting the Socio-cultural Dimensions of Empire 195
- Index 200