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Mysticism, Myth & 'Celtic' Nationalism: A Case Study of Cornwall?
We would welcome stories of or thoughts on haunted Cornwall from anyone who is interested in the project.
The project's organisers are: Dr Marion Gibson and Dr Garry Tregidga. The project’s post-doctoral research fellow is Dr Shelley Trower.
Myths of haunted localities figure prominently in canonical literature and popular culture. Our project will explore how, through stories of such places, notions of the past influence current debates about nationhood, locality and ethnicity in modern Britain.
The project will adopt a broad interpretation of what it means for a place to be 'haunted' - one that allows for many kinds of feelings and ideas about how the past inhabits the present. We will analyse both oral traditions and written texts, taking Cornwall as our initial focus from 1800 to the present. By asking specific questions in relation to a specific region we aim to deepen our understanding of the relationships between past, present, and place and how they influence people's conceptions of their own identity and locality.
Cornwall offers an excellent example of a 'haunted' location, whose mythologised past is bound up with cultural, economic and political factors. Its hauntedness is sold to tourists, for example, as the tourism website Cornwall Calling indicates: ''There is a wealth of folk lore about piskies and giants that roamed Cornwall in the past. The legendary King Arthur is said to have had his Camelot at Tintagel...'.
Although tin and copper mining ensured that Cornwall played a prominent role during Britain's Industrial Revolution, its subsequent dependence on tourism, combined with the emergence of an essentially antiquarian 'Celtic Revivalist' movement, meant that memory and remembrance took on great significance in cultural constructions of place. Significantly, the 'spirit' of legendary and historical figures, such as the prehistoric 'Celts', King Arthur and Myghal Josef An Gof (the leader of the 1497 Cornish rebellion) has been resurrected to serve the changing needs of the present. This is intimately connected with perceptions of Cornwall as un-English, 'Celtic' and 'different'.
Our project will examine this specific locality and literary and oral narratives of its politicised hauntings in the context of wider British and 'Celtic' studies. These studies, including ours, are extremely topical because of the recent upsurge of nationalism in the UK - a trend exemplified by the Scottish elections of 2007. Our project's immediate results will be: two books on the national and specifically Cornish picture, including the selected proceedings of a conference attended by both academics and members of the public; two journal articles; an exhibition involving the wider community was well as an academic conference; an archive of oral history recordings open to the public; and a longer-term book project on myths of the British past.
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Latest
 
Dr Marion Gibson in English and Dr. Garry Tregidga in Cornish Studies have been successful in obtaining a £252,000 grant from the AHRC for the 'Mysticism, Myth and 'Celtic' Nationalism' project.
This will fund a research collaboration between English, History and Cornish Studies at the Tremough Campus in Cornwall. The project explores literary and oral narratives of local identity as they are influenced by ideas of myth and mysticism.
Contact Details
Dr Marion Gibson
Senior Lecturer in English
Department of English
University of Exeter, Cornwall Campus
Penryn
Cornwall, UK
TR10 9EZ
Telephone: 01326 371897
Email: Marion.H.Gibson@exeter.ac.uk
Dr Garry Tregidga
Deputy Director
Institute of Cornish Studies
University of Exeter, Cornwall Campus
Penryn
Cornwall, UK
TR10 9EZ
Telephone: 01392 261022
Email: G.H.Tregidga@exeter.ac.uk |