高地人与城市:迁移、分割和现代早期伦敦高地人的形象,1603-C1750

IF 0.3 Q2 HISTORY
A. Kennedy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

近几十年来,对近代早期苏格兰移民的研究经历了广泛的发展,但倾向于将海外移民置于苏格兰人在英国其他地方的存在之上。来自苏格兰高地的移民尤其如此:关于美洲或欧洲大陆高地人的描写很多,但关于他们在英格兰和威尔士,尤其是伦敦的经历却几乎一无所知,而伦敦一直是苏格兰人向南迁移的主要目的地。本文试图通过探索17世纪和18世纪早期高地移民到伦敦的程度和性质来解决这一差距。本文首先调查了残存的证据,证明苏格兰高地人在英国首都的存在,表明他们最容易出现在精英阶层和商业部门,而在工匠,专业人员或穷人阶层中相对较少。也有人认为,高地人往往没有形成一个连贯的民族“集团”,而是被纳入更广泛的苏格兰侨民中。然而,这是自相矛盾的,因为在这一时期,伦敦正在形成一种强烈的“高地人”形象,与“苏格兰人”截然不同。因此,本文继续探讨高地人意象的起源,并得出结论,那些实际居住在伦敦的高地人对它的贡献很小。相反,图像制作者主要借鉴了苏格兰人已有的刻板印象、旅行者的报告、不法分子的故事和政治话语,例如围绕詹姆斯比主义的言论。所有这些都表明,现代伦敦早期的高地社区在某种程度上是不可见的,这篇文章认为,这突显了苏格兰高地/低地划分的根本模糊性。它还表明,一个分段的同化模型,而不是种族文化模型,可能为理解近代早期伦敦的苏格兰侨民提供最可靠的手段。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Highlanders and the City: Migration, Segmentation, and the Image of the Highlander in Early Modern London, 1603-c.1750
The study of Scottish migration in the early modern period has experienced extensive growth in recent decades, but has tended to privilege overseas movement over the presence of Scots elsewhere in Britain. This is particularly true of migrants from the Scottish Highlands: much has been written about Highlanders in America or Continental Europe, but almost nothing is known about their experiences in England and Wales, and in particular in London, consistently the major destination of Scots moving southwards. This article seeks to address that gap by exploring the extent and nature of Highland migration to London during the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. It begins by surveying the surviving evidence for Highlanders’ presence in the English capital, suggesting that they were most readily to be found in the elite and mercantile sectors, and were comparatively rarer among the ranks of artisans, professionals, or the poor. It is also argued that Highlanders tended not to form a coherent ethnic ‘bloc’, but instead were subsumed within the wider Scottish diaspora. This, however, was paradoxical, because London was during this period developing a strong image of ‘the Highlanders’ as distinctive from ‘the Scot’. The article therefore goes on to explore the origins of Highlander imagery, and concludes that those Highlanders actually resident in London contributed very little to it. Instead, image-makers drew predominantly on pre-existing Scottish stereotypes, travellers’ reports, outlaw tales, and political discourse, for example surrounding Jacobitism. All of this suggests a degree of invisibility around the Highland community in early modern London, and that, the article suggests, underlines the fundamental blurriness of the Highland/Lowland divide within Scotland. It also indicates that a segmented, rather than ethno-cultural model of assimilation might offer the most reliable means of understanding the Scottish diaspora in early modern London.
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CiteScore
0.10
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