Great Arches Viewed from the Coasts of Bohemia: Reflections Inspired by Tables of Kings
Great Arches Viewed from the Coasts of Bohemia: Reflections Inspired by Tables of Kings
Author(s): Derek SayerSubject(s): Political Philosophy, Political history, Government/Political systems, Nationalism Studies, Period(s) of Nation Building
Published by: SAGE Publications Ltd
Keywords: Bohemia; state formation; England; Britain; history; narratives; nationalism;
Summary/Abstract: Considering the differences between the superficial orderliness of the English/British table of royal succession and the apparent anarchy of its Bohemian counterpart, this essay questions aspects of the analysis of English state formation offered in Philip Corrigan and Derek Sayer’s 1985 study The Great Arch: English State Formation as Cultural Revolution. Rather than providing a contrast to England’s institutional political continuities over centuries, Bohemia’s manifestly fractured history furnishes a vantage point from which the ideological character of such claimed historical continuities becomes clear. E. P. Thompson’s image of a “great arch” of state formation attributes far too much shape, solidity, and coherence to a process that was always, whether in England or Bohemia, a matter of flux and fluidity – a landscape in constant erosion, upon which coherence is only ever imposed in momentary retrospect.
- Issue Year: 26/2018
- Issue No: 2
- Page Range: 97-114
- Page Count: 18
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF