Land of the Forgotten Sex

Land of the Forgotten Sex - Scottish Review article by Scottish Review
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Land of the
forgotten sex

Kenneth Roy
Airbrushed from history, or objects of misogynism on the internet: either way, bright Scotswomen endure a raw deal

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The Midgie
celebrates the great exam success

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Dublinwee

Fall of the Celtic Tiger

Tom Gallagher
Ireland is waking up to a nightmare and the candour of the country’s agonising is remarkable. Is Scotland capable of such self-examination?

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Alan Fisher
Hope in Niger

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Saanichwee

Beaten out of
their culture

Alf Young
The generosity of spirit of First Nation Canadians, punished for speaking their language, is deeply moving

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Rear Window

Ian Hamilton QC visits the local shop

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The Back Page

Amusements and diversions

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8
This Scotland

‘the people of Saltcoats – a sordid race’
John Galt (1779-1839), ‘The Ayrshire Legatees’

4

‘Never have I seen desolation less abominable; but desolate it is, Ulva’
George Scott-Moncrieff, ‘The Scottish Islands’ (1952)

3

‘Inverkip is so rough they put a date stamp on your head when they mug
you so they don’t do you twice in the one day’
Chic Murray (1919-85)

2

‘I am glad to have seen the Caledonian Canal, but don’t want to see it again’
Matthew Arnold (1822-1888), ‘Letters’

1

‘Dundee, a frowsy fisherwife addicted to gin and infanticide’
Lewis Grassic Gibbon (1901-35), ‘Scottish Scene’

 

1

‘Wick is the meanest of men’s towns, set on what is surely the baldest of God’s bays’
Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894), letter

 

1

‘If Dingwall was in its ordinary state, it must be an excellent place for sleeping a life away in’
Henry Cockburn (1779-1854), ‘Circuit Journeys’

 

1‘If justice were done to the inhabitants of Inverness, in twenty years’ time there would be no-one left there but the Provost and the hang-man’
John Telford (early 19th century)

Our archive

Wednesday 4 August 2010

It is time the Americans were summoned to Scotland to answer one or two awkward questions
Kenneth Roy

The enduring legacy of John Smith
Barbara Millar

They can only pray for rain
Alan Fisher

 

Tuesday 3 August 2010

In the defences of the secret state, there is suddenly a gaping hole
Kenneth Roy

Suntans and the Loch Wobegone Effect
John Forsyth

They didn’t eat yesterday, they aren’t eating today
Alan Fisher

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