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      Britishness and Otherness: An Argument

      The Journal of British Studies
      University of Chicago Press

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          Abstract

          There is no more effective way of bonding together the disparate sections of restless peoples than to unite them against outsiders. [E. J. Hobsbawm, Nations and Nationalism since 1780(Cambridge, 1990), p. 91]

          Britain is an invented nation, not so much older than the United States. [Peter Scott, Knowledge and Nation(Edinburgh, 1990), p. 168]

          The morning of Saturday, September 14, 1793, was bitterly cold, and George Macartney, Viscount Macartney of Dervock in the county of Antrim, had been up since four o'clock, making final preparations for his audience with the emperor of China at his summer palace at Jehol, just north of the Great Wall. He stood waiting in the large, silken tent for over an hour before Ch'ien-lung eventually arrived, “seated in an open palanquin, carried by sixteen bearers, attended by numbers of officers bearing flags, standards, and umbrellas.” To the fury of the watching Chinese courtiers who had wanted him to execute the full kowtow (three separate kneelings and nine knockings of the head on the floor), Macartney went down on one knee only and presented the emperor with a letter from George III in a gold casket covered with diamonds. He followed this with other gifts—pottery, the best that Josiah Wedgwood's factory in Staffordshire could produce, a diving bell patented by the Anglo-Scottish engineer John Smeaton, sword blades from Birmingham, an orrery, a telescope, and some clocks.

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          Most cited references2

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          The Catholic Threat and the British Press in the 1720s and 1730s

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            English History's Forgotten Context: Scotland, Ireland, Wales

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              Author and article information

              Journal
              applab
              The Journal of British Studies
              J. Br. Stud.
              University of Chicago Press
              0021-9371
              1545-6986
              October 1992
              January 10 2014
              October 1992
              : 31
              : 04
              : 309-329
              Article
              10.1086/386013
              93b86e78-6434-4cbb-b7b4-6d4e75ac6c75
              © 1992
              History

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