Introduction
1. Cornish or Klingon? The Standardization of the Cornish Language,
Bernard Deacon
2. I-Affection in Breton and Cornish Nicholas, J.A. Williams
3. Additional Thoughts on the Medieval 'Cornish Bible', Matthew
Spriggs
4. Who was the Duchess of Cornwall in Nicholas Boson's (c. 1660-70)
'The Duchesse of Cornwall's Progresse to see the Land's End...'?,
Matthew Spriggs
5. The Literary Anthropology of Mrs Havelock Ellis: An Exploration
of the Insider and Outsider Categories, Gemma Goodman
6. 'The Words Are There Before Us': A Reading of Twentieth-century
Anglo-Cornish Poems Written by Women, Briar Wood
7. Narratives in the Net: Fiction and Cornish Tourism, Graham Busby
and Patrick Laviolette
8. Cornish Copper Mining 1795-1830: Economy, Structure and Change,
Jim Lewis
9. The 1913 China Clay Dispute: 'One and All' or 'One-That's All'?,
Ronald Perry and Charles Thurlow
10. Nationalized Cornwall, Terry Chapman
11. 'Guizing': Ancient Traditions and Modern Sensitivities, Merv
Davey
Philip Payton is Professor of Cornish and
Australian Studies in the University of Exeter and Director of the
Institute of Cornish Studies at the University’s Cornwall campus.
He is also the author of A.L. Rowse in Cornwall: A Paradoxical
Patriot and numerous other books on Cornwall and the Cornish.
'Cornish Studies is probably the only "county" series that can
legitimately claim to represent the past and present of a nation.
As such it consistently provides rich material for the
understanding of the British past and present as a whole, and of
their impact on the wider world.' (Ronald Hutton, Professor of
History, University of Bristol)
‘All the articles are well written and contain much in the way of
facts rather than generalisations as one would expect from the
academic authors but still of much interest to ordinary readers.’
(Cornwall FHS Journal, No. 125, September 2007)
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