The Ruins of Experience: Scotland's "Romantick" Highlands and the Birth of the Modern WitnessThere emerged, during the latter half of the eighteenth century, a reflexive relationship between shifting codes of legal evidence in British courtrooms and the growing fascination throughout Europe with the "primitive" Scottish Highlands. New methods for determining evidential truth, linked with the growing prominence of lawyers and a formalized division of labor between witnesses and jurors, combined to devalue the authority of witness testimony, magnifying the rupture between experience and knowledge. Juries now pronounced verdicts based not upon the certainty of direct experience but rather upon abstractions of probability or reasonable likelihood. |
From inside the book
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... primitive, picturesque Highlands and the false consciousness universally promoted by capitalism. Katie Trumpener's Baniic Nationalism (1997) revealed the impact of the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Celtic peripheries on the ...
... primitive past even as the “unreal” region also presented the illusion of a sphere closed off from capital and therefore associated with strictly human (as opposed to profit—driven) “values.” Womack argues that the Highlands ...
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Contents
Experience and the Allure of the Improbable | 1 |
STRUCTURE | 21 |
FEELING | 109 |
Notes | 199 |
225 | |
241 | |
Acknowledgments | 251 |
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The Ruins of Experience: Scotland's "Romantick" Highlands and the Birth of ... Matthew Wickman No preview available - 2007 |