Title of article :
Saving the Soul of the Nation: Essentialist Nationalism and Interwar Rural Wales
Author/Authors :
WIL GRIFFITH، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
18
From page :
177
To page :
194
Abstract :
This article explores how the land and the agricultural community were made out to be central to the assertion of Welsh national identity between the world wars. Political Nationalism came out of a disillusion with Liberal national sentiment. Liberal nationalists had recognised the significance of the land in Wales and made secure a devolved administrative regime for agriculture, the Welsh Council of Agriculture, originally established before 1914. For the political Nationalists, however, this was far too little. They perceived a cultural and economic crisis which might be overcome only through complete self-government. That crisis originated historically in the annexation of Wales to England which had intruded an alien land system and destroyed a natural, patriarchal rural order; which had foisted an alien commercial, industrial system and had led to the Anglicisation of Welsh society. In its depressed state, inter-war Wales was subjected to a new and reactive form of politics, often influenced by European right wing ideas, which was anti-urban, anti-capitalist, anti-English and anti-modern, all of which had wider repercussions for the future of Welsh identity.
Journal title :
Rural History
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
Rural History
Record number :
679060
Link To Document :
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