The twentieth volume in the acclaimed paperback series . . . the only county series that can legitimately claim to represent the past and present of a nation. Cornish Studies has consistently - and successfully - sought to investigate and understand the complex nature of Cornish identity, as well as to discuss its implications for society and governance in contemporary Cornwall. Publication of Cornish Studies: Twenty marks two decades of this internationally acclaimed paperback series The volume discusses Cornish medieval and early modern studies, examines the efforts of Cornish language revivalists past and present, and considers the relation between Cornish folk tradition and Cornish identity, as well as evaluating Cornish literature in Cornwall and Australia, investigating the distinctive features of Cornish politics in the first half of the twentieth century, analysing the separation of wives and husbands during Cornwall's 'Great Emigration, and reviewing Cornish mine accidents.
"For the past twenty years, Cornish Studies has stood at the very heart of the ongoing scholarly conversation over what it means - and what is has meant - to be Cornish. Interdisciplinary and internationalist in its approach, the series adopts a wide variety of perspectives in order to set the people of Cornwall - and the wider Cornish diaspora - in a truly global context".
Mark Stoyle, Professor of History, University of Southampton
The twentieth volume in the acclaimed paperback series . . . the only county series that can legitimately claim to represent the past and present of a nation. Cornish Studies has consistently - and successfully - sought to investigate and understand the complex nature of Cornish identity, as well as to discuss its implications for society and governance in contemporary Cornwall. Publication of Cornish Studies: Twenty marks two decades of this internationally acclaimed paperback series The volume discusses Cornish medieval and early modern studies, examines the efforts of Cornish language revivalists past and present, and considers the relation between Cornish folk tradition and Cornish identity, as well as evaluating Cornish literature in Cornwall and Australia, investigating the distinctive features of Cornish politics in the first half of the twentieth century, analysing the separation of wives and husbands during Cornwall's 'Great Emigration, and reviewing Cornish mine accidents.
"For the past twenty years, Cornish Studies has stood at the very heart of the ongoing scholarly conversation over what it means - and what is has meant - to be Cornish. Interdisciplinary and internationalist in its approach, the series adopts a wide variety of perspectives in order to set the people of Cornwall - and the wider Cornish diaspora - in a truly global context".
Mark Stoyle, Professor of History, University of Southampton
Introduction
1. Bernard Deacon, Philip Payton
2. Mending the gap in the Medieval, Modern and Post-modern in New
Cornish Studies: ‘Celtic’ materialism and the potential of
presentism, Alan M. Kent
3. Tristram Winslade – The Desperate Heart of a Catholic in exile,
Cheryl Hayden
4. William Gwavas and a Lost Cornish Vocabulary fragment at Trinity
College Dublin, Sharon Lowenna
5. Cornish Linguistic Landscape, Neil Kennedy
The Celto-Cornish Movement and Folk Revival: Competing speech
communities, Merv Davey
6. ‘The Spectral Bridegroom’: A study in Cornish Folklore, Ronald
M. James
7. Rural Geographies: The figure in the landscape in literature of
Cornwall, Gemma Goodman
8. Cornish-Australian identity and the novels of Rosanne Hawke,
Emma Bennett
9. ‘Husband Abroad’: Quantifying spousal separation associated with
emigration in nineteenth-century Cornwall, Lesley Trotter
10. Accidental injury in Cornish Mines, 1900–1950, Allen
Buckley
11. ‘A Shrewd Choice’: Isaac Foot and Cornish politics in the
General Election of 1910’, Garry Tregidga
12. The Inter-War Cornish By-Elections: Microcosm of ‘Rebellion’?,
John Ault
13. Bernard Deacon: Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Philip Payton is Professor of Cornish & Australian
Studies in the University of Exeter and Director of the Institute
of Cornish Studies at the University’s Cornwall campus. He is
also the author of A.L. Rowse and Cornwall: A Paradoxical Patriot
(UEP, 2005, paperback 2007), Making Moonta: The Invention of
‘Australia’s Little Cornwall’ (UEP, 2007), John Betjeman and
Cornwall: 'The Celebrated Cornish Nationalist' (UEP, 2010),
Regional Australia and the Great War: ‘The Boys from Old Kio’,and
numerous other books on Cornwall and the Cornish.
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