Description
This scholarly work by Leith Davis investigates the profound influence of Jacobitism on British cultural memory spanning over a century. Davis traces how loyalty to the Stuart cause, despite military defeats and political marginalization, became embedded in literary works, ballads, historical narratives, and artistic expressions.
The study examines how Jacobite sympathies evolved across social classes and regions, particularly in Scotland and Ireland, revealing the complex relationship between political allegiance and cultural identity. Davis argues that Jacobitism functioned as a repository for alternative visions of nation, legitimacy, and historical narrative that challenged prevailing Hanoverian ideology.
By analyzing poetry, prose, visual culture, and oral traditions, the book demonstrates how Jacobite memory remained culturally significant long after the movement’s political viability ended. This comprehensive analysis illuminates how defeated political causes maintain influence through cultural memory and artistic representation.







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