Название: The Frayed Atlantic Edge: A Historian’s Journey from Shetland to the Channel
Автор: David Gange
Издательство: HarperCollins
isbn: 9780008225124
isbn:
William Collins
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London SE1 9GF
This eBook first published in Great Britain by William Collins in 2019
Copyright © David Gange 2019
Cover art by Joe McLaren
Maps by Martin Brown
David Gange asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
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Source ISBN: 9780008225117
Ebook Edition © July 2019 ISBN: 9780008225124
Version: 2019-05-29
For Llinos, who taught me to love big seas and small languages
Contents
Dedication
Introduction: A Journey in the Making
The Western Isles (September/October)
Sutherland and Assynt (November)
The Inner Sound and Skye (January)
Argyll and Ulster (February/March)
Bardsey to the Bristol Channel (June)
THIS JOURNEY INVOLVED arriving, dripping and bedraggled, in dozens of coastal communities. When I set out, I hadn’t imagined just how generous the people whose homes and workplaces I dampened would be: without such openness, particularly evident on small islands, this project would never have got far. I learned as much through long evenings of discussion as through the other three resources on which the book is based: libraries, archives and the observation of land and sea from the kayak. It wasn’t just the spectacles of sea cliffs, nor the dramas of ocean weather, but also those social occasions that meant I ended the journey with greatly intensified enthusiasm for scattered Atlantic islands like Foula, Barraigh and Thoraí.
Such conversations worked to strengthen the conviction I set out with: that British and Irish histories are usually written inside out, perpetuating the misconception that today’s land-bound geographies have existed forever. Despite the efforts of authors such as Barry Cunliffe, whose Facing the Ocean: The Atlantic and its Peoples, 8000 BC to AD 1500 (2001) inspired much debate among historians, the significance of coasts is consistently underestimated, and the potential of small boats as tools to make sense of their histories is rarely explored.
This book sets out to put some of that imbalance right, showing not only that Atlantic geographies have been crucial to British and Irish life but that they continue to be so. It is structured by region, because part of its purpose is to show how similar ingredients of wind, waves and rock have been transformed into entirely different island and coastal cultures by the divergent processes of history. The chapters were written in order, while I travelled, so my process of learning runs in parallel to the reader’s experience of moving through the book: burrowing gradually СКАЧАТЬ