Provides a cultural history and political critique of Scottish
devolution
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Provides the first critical history of Scottish devolution
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Offers the first multidisciplinary study of (UK or Scottish)
devolution: engaging extensively with the work of historians,
sociologists, political scientists and cultural theorists
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Combines close attention to political and electoral factors with
cultural issues and developments
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Draws on political theory which illuminates devolution from outside
its terms
This book is about the role of writers and intellectuals in shaping
constitutional change. Considering an unprecedented range of literary,
political and archival materials, it explores how questions of 'voice',
language and identity featured in debates leading to the new Scottish
Parliament in 1999. Tracing both the 'dream' of cultural empowerment and
the 'grind' of electoral strategy, it reconstructs the influence of
magazines such as Scottish International, Radical Scotland,
Cencrastus and Edinburgh Review, and sets the fiction of William
McIlvanney, James Kelman, Irvine Welsh, A. L. Kennedy and James
Robertson within a radically altered picture of devolved Scotland.