Publisher's Synopsis
Until relatively modern times Scotland was largely a Gaelic-speaking nation. Areas that were described by Doctor Johnson in 1775 as being as remote and as unknown as Borneo or Sumatra became one of the first sites of modern mass tourism and the subject of more travel writing than any other part of Scotland. Recent learned writers have variously described Scotland as the 'land of dreamtime', the Highlands as 'Fancy's Land', and the country as the site of the 'invention of tradition'. Unfortunately, that narrative often bears little relation to the actual lived experience of the native people. In this book Coinneach Maclean journeys through the present and former Gaelic speaking areas of Scotland from the perspective of the native Gaels.