At Home in the Hills: Sense of Place in the Scottish Borders Buy on Amazon
Facebook LinkedIn

At Home in the Hills: Sense of Place in the Scottish Borders

Author John N. Gray
Publisher Berghahn Books
26.96 29.95 -10% USD

Usually ships in 24 hours

Book Details
Author(s) John N. Gray
Publisher Berghahn Books
ISBN / ASIN 0857451790
ISBN-13 9780857451798
Availability Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank #3,983,273
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
Ratings & Reviews No reviews yet — be the first!

No reviews yet.

Description
"... a fascinating history of the Borders as space defined through exercises of power ... The absorbing history of space provides the setting for a fine-grained ethnograpy of place ... It also has the great virtue of being most readable." · The Australian Journal of Anthropology

To most outsiders, the hills of the Scottish Borders are a bleak and foreboding space - usually made to represent the stigmatized Other, Ad Finis, by the centers of power in Edinburgh, London, and Brussels. At a time when globalization seems to threaten outr sense of place, people of the Scottish borderlands provide a vivid case study of how the being-in-place is central to the sense of self and identity. Since the end of the thirteenth century, people living in the Scottish Border hills have engaged in armed raiding on the frontier with England, developed capitalist sheep farming in the newly united kingdom of Great Britain, and are struggling to maintain their family farms in one of the marginal agricultural rural regions of the European Community. Throughout their history, sheep farmers living in these hills have established an abiding sense of place in which family and farm have become refractions of each other. Adopting a phenomenological perspecitve, this book concentrates on the contemporary farming practices - shepherding, selling lambs and rams at auctions - as well as family and class relations through which hill sheep fuse people, place, and way of life to create this sense of being-at-home in the hills.

Donate to EbookNetworking
No Prev
No Next