'This is travel writing at its best.' Katherine Norbury, Observer An Observer Book of the Year His father Brian taught Rory Stewart how to walk, and walked with him on journeys from Iran to Malaysia. Now they have chosen to do their final walk together along 'the Marches' - the frontier that divides their two countries, Scotland and England. Brian, a ninety-year-old former colonial official and intelligence officer, arrives in Newcastle from Scotland dressed in tartan and carrying a draft of his new book You Know More Chinese Than You Think. Rory comes from his home in the Lake District, carrying a Punjabi fighting stick which he used when walking across Afghanistan. On their six-hundred-mile, thirty-day journey - with Rory on foot, and his father 'ambushing' him by car - the pair relive Scottish dances, reflect on Burmese honey-bears, and on the loss of human presence in the British landscape. On mountain ridges and in housing estates they uncover a forgotten country crushed between England and Scotland: the Middleland. They cross upland valleys which once held forgotten peoples and languages - still preserved in sixth-century lullabies and sixteenth-century ballads. The surreal tragedy of Hadrian's Wall forces them to re-evaluate their own experiences in the Iraq and Vietnam wars. The wild places of the uplands reveal abandoned monasteries, border castles, secret military test sites and newly created wetlands. They discover unsettling modern lives, lodged in an ancient land. Their odyssey develops into a history of nationhood, an anatomy of the landscape, a chronicle of contemporary Britain and an exuberant encounter between a father and a son. And as the journey deepens, and the end approaches, Brian and Rory fight to match, step by step, modern voices, nationalisms and contemporary settlements to the natural beauty of the Marches, and a fierce absorption in tradition in their own unconventional lives.
... Enrique Neira Fernández , Fabio Ocaziones Jiménez , Francesca Ramos , Gilberto Toro , Guillermo Briceño , Luis Alberto Lobo , Luis Miguel Morelli , Marina Sierra , Marlene Bustamante , Norma Rodríguez , Socorro Ramírez , Jeannette ...
He invoked North America as a touchstone for the Argentine experience of barbarism, conjuring the writing of James Fenimore Cooper and his depictions of savagery in The Last of the Mohicans and The Pioneer.79 His evocation of Cooper's ...
comme le rappelle Alain Boyer ( 2001 ) , ou Paul Meyer , du SGARE , interrogé par Nicolas Cassauba - Tircazot sur l'investissement de l'Etat français en matière de CT : L'Etat l'a quand même initialisé , ce domaine !
Zhang, Qiuwen [Chang Chiu-wen], “Qingdai Yong-Qian liangchao zhi yongbing chuanbian Zhandui” Zhongyang yanjiuyuan jindaishi yanjiusuo jikan no. 21 (June 1993), 265–85. 15. Tsomu, “Local Aspirations and National Constraints,” 340, ...
By presenting a number of studies of everyday life in European borderlands, the book addresses the multifarious and complex ways in which borders function as both barriers and bridges.
This collection of writings explores European borders from the 15th century to the present. The territorial scope ranges from the Arctic Ocean and Scandinavia to Central Europe.
"This book explores how social and territorial boundaries have influenced the approaches and practices of the South Africa Police Service (SAPS).
Although the indigenous peoples inhabiting newly conquered and demarcated spaces were subjugated in a variety of ways, Ruling the Savage Periphery isolates continuities across regimes and locates the patterns of transmission that made ...
Once the Golden Horde became a non-factor in the steppe, the East became synonymous with endless conquest for the Russians, and in the 19th century in particular, Russian nationalists had begun to pursue the narrative of the empire's ...
Anchored by a substantial introduction that walks students through the terminology and historiography, the collection presents the major debates and questions most prominent in the field today.