Nationalism in stateless nations: images of self and other in Scotland and Newfoundland
Acknowledgements 1 Introduction 2 National identity-building National identity; Discourse analysis and the study of national identity; Fomenting factors and actors in national identity-building processes 3 Scotland and Newfoundland in comparison Marriages of convenience, not of love: constitutional histories; In bed with elephants: socio-economics and politics; Scotch and the Rock: cultural heritage and identity 4 Scottish national identity and nationalism Tartanry and the cabbage bed: cultural nationalism in Scotland; Responding to the decline of Britain: political nationalism in Scotland, 1967-1979; The 1979 referendum: high expectations and the failure of political nationalism; Popular political nationalism, 1980-1997 5 Newfoundland national identity and nationalism Nations in the bosom: the development of Newfoundland ethnicity; 'Newfcult' and renaissance: cultural nationalism in modern Newfoundland; The dog that snarled: autonomism in Newfoundland, 1979-1989; Hibernation, 1989-2003 6 Images of self and other in Scottish newspapers The Scotsman, 1967-1979; The Scotsman, 1980-1990; Glasgow Herald, 1967-1979; Glasgow Herald, 1980-1990 7 Images of self and other in Newfoundland newspapers Daily News, 1967-1984; Evening Telegram, 1967-1979; Evening Telegram, 1979-1990 8 Conclusion Ethnic distinctness and national identity; Cultural nationalism and ethno-cultural arguments; Socio-economic decline, dependency and inequality; Stateless nations: central government neglect and a malfunctioning constitutional set-up; Alternatives to dependency, economic and political self-confidence, and social consensus; Pragmatic unionism, centralism and political nationalism; Autonomism in the early twenty-first century Bibliography Index