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Popular imperialism, Scottish identity, and William Wallace in an Australian colonial city

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-17, 13:32 authored by BV Wilkie
The narrative of William Wallace holds a prominent position in the current conception of England as a negative referent for Scotland’s national identity—its binary “Other”, against which Wallace valiantly fought. This article considers a contrasting understanding of Scottish national identity from the late-nineteenth century, and explores the events surrounding the unveiling of a statue of William Wallace in Australia during the year of 1889. It illuminates how settlers interpreted this national hero in such a way that demonstrated loyalty to the Union and Empire, and accommodated a convergence of English, Scottish, Irish, and Welsh migrants in a British colonial city. The article highlights how statues, the ceremonies surrounding them, and their public reception help us to investigate the symbolic, ritualistic, and performative dimensions of identity formulation. It considers how public monuments, providing a sense of authority to particular groups, can marginalise others by acting to settle cultural competition, and will reflect on competing interpretations of the statue at its unveiling.

History

Alternative title

L’impérialisme populaire et l’identité écossaise : William Wallace dans une ville coloniale d’Australie

Journal

Études écossaises

Pagination

135-152

Location

Grenoble, France

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1240-1439

eISSN

1969-6337

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2015, Études écossaises

Issue

17

Publisher

G.D.R. Etudes écossaises, Université Stendhal Grenoble