On Glasgow and Edinburgh

On Glasgow and Edinburgh

by RobertCrawford (Author)

Synopsis

Edinburgh and Glasgow enjoy a famously scratchy relationship. Resembling other intercity rivalries throughout the world, from Madrid and Barcelona, to Moscow and St. Petersburg, to Beijing and Shanghai, Scotland's sparring metropolises just happen to be much smaller and closer together--like twin stars orbiting a common axis. Yet their size belies their world-historical importance as cultural and commercial capitals of the British Empire, and the mere forty miles between their city centers does not diminish their stubbornly individual nature. Robert Crawford dares to bring both cities to life between the covers of one book. His story of the fluctuating fortunes of each city is animated by the one-upping that has been entrenched since the eighteenth century, when Edinburgh lost parliamentary sovereignty and took on its proud wistfulness, while Glasgow came into its industrial promise and defiance. Using landmarks and individuals as gateways to their character and past, this tale of two cities mixes novelty and familiarity just as Scotland's capital and its largest city do. Crawford gives us Adam Smith and Walter Scott, the Scottish Enlightenment and the School of Art, but also tiny apartments, a poetry library, Spanish Civil War volunteers, and the nineteenth-century entrepreneur Maria Theresa Short. We see Glasgow's best-known street through the eyes of a Victorian child, and Edinburgh University as it appeared to Charles Darwin. Crawford's literary detailed account affirms what people from Glasgow or Edinburgh have long doubted--that it is possible to love both cities at the same time.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 320
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Published: 25 Jan 2013

ISBN 10: 0674048881
ISBN 13: 9780674048881
Book Overview: A wonderful book-richly informative, critically astute, and lucidly and vividly written. -- Ian Duncan, author of Scott's Shadow: The Novel in Romantic Edinburgh People familiar with either place will find much to divert them in these pages, and those who have never visited Scotland's great cities will feel that they have been there after reading Crawford's book. -- Fiona Stafford, author of Local Attachments A delightfully engaging mix of history, architectural reference, and literary allusion. A most enjoyable read, which will have wide appeal well beyond aficionados of these two great cities. -- T. M. Devine, author of The Scottish Nation: A Modern History This book is a beautiful idea lovingly accomplished. It is high time that the old and ugly rivalry between Glasgow and Edinburgh ended, and this book shows us how to do it. Like an inspirational couples counsellor, Robert Crawford suggests that bigamy is the answer: we should learn to love both of these great cities with equal passion. He does, and so do I. You should try it, too. -- Richard Holloway, author of Leaving Alexandria: A Memoir of Faith and Doubt

Media Reviews

The book offers a portrait, not a narrative history, and is intended for visitors as well as for natives and other Scots, many of whom will find, as I did, that they don't know either

city as well as they supposed... On Glasgow and Edinburgh is an enjoyable book, its learning leavened by the author's wit and sense of the absurd.--Allan Massie Times Literary Supplement (04/12/2013)


Crawford, impartially analyses the character, past and present of Scotland's two combatants, not in a dry academic treatise, but a lively and interesting urban exploration which I found captivating...Architecture, streets, parks, gardens, citizens of note, industry, government, history, the arts, vice; all these, and more, are covered here in

fascinating, minutely researched detail...Eminently readable, enlightening and

entertaining, On Glasgow and Edinburgh is truly a tale of two modern cities. This

might be the only book you'll ever need to read if you want to learn what makes these two places tick; elements in common and aspects which set them apart.--Ian Neilson The Scots Magazine (04/01/2013)


Excellent.
--John McDermott Financial Times (07/26/2013)
Author Bio
Poet and critic Robert Crawford is Professor of Modern Scottish Literature at the University of St. Andrews.