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The Britannias
The Britannias: An Archipelago's Tale | Alice Albinia
2 posts | 1 read | 1 to read
'A dazzlingly brilliant book' Hannah Dawson The Britannias tells the story of Britain's islands and how they are woven into its collective cultural psyche. From Neolithic Orkney to modern-day Thanet, Alice Albinia explores the furthest reaches of Britain's island topography, once known (wrote Pliny) by the collective term, Britanniae. Sailing over borders, between languages and genres, trespassing through the past to understand the present, this book knocks the centre out to foreground neglected epics and subversive voices. The ancient British mythology of islands ruled by women runs like a secret, hidden river through the literature of this land - from Roman colonial-era reports to early Welsh poetry, Renaissance drama to Restoration utopias - transcending and subverting the most male-fixated of ages. The Britannias looks far back into the past for direction and solace, while searching for new meaning about women's status in the body politic. Boldly upturning established truths about Britain, it pays homage to the islands' beauty, independence and their suppressed or forgotten histories.
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review
jenniferw88
post image
Mehso-so
Librarybelle It sounds like this could be pretty dense 6mo
Hooked_on_books Uh-oh! I just got this one from the library. We‘ll see how I do with it. 6mo
46 likes3 comments
quote
jenniferw88

First, they saw a lobster pushing Mesolithic worked-stone tools out of its burrow - 'the first known Mesolithic archaeological excavation carried out by a member of the lobster community', as the Isle of Wight's county archaeologist David Tomalin put it wryly in the report he wrote up later.

😂😂😂

Aimeesue 😂😂😂 7mo
Sace 😆 🦞 7mo
45 likes2 comments