Ewen Cameron explores the political debate between unionism, liberalism,
socialism and nationalism, and the changing political relationship
between Scotland and the United Kingdom. He sets Scottish experience
alongside the Irish, Welsh and European, and considers British
dimensions of historical change - involvement in two world wars,
imperial growth and decline, for example - from a Scottish perspective.
He relates political events to trends and movements in the economy,
culture and society of the nation's regions - borders, lowlands,
highlands, and islands. Underlying the history, and sometimes impelling
its ambitions, are the evolution and growth of national self-confidence
and identity which fundamentally affected Scotland's destiny in the last
century. Dr Cameron ends by considering how such forces may transform it
in this one. Like the period it describes this book has politics at its
heart. The recent upsurge of scholarship and publication, backed by the
author's extensive primary research, underpin its vivid and well-paced
narrative.