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HuSS > Institute of Cornish Studies
Welcome to the Institute of Cornish Studies (ICS)We exist to support and foster academic research on Cornwall and to carry out research projects on Cornwall and its past. The ICS was formed in 1970 as a unique collaborative venture between Cornwall County Council and the University of Exeter. At that time its first Director, Professor Charles Thomas, defined its field as ‘the study of all aspects of man and his handiwork in the regional setting (Cornwall and Scilly), past, present and future. The development of society, industry and the landscape in our fast changing world is as much of concern … as the history of those vast topics in the recent and remote past.’ While this ambitious agenda remains, during the time of the current Director, Professor Philip Payton, the attention of our staff has become more focused on historical studies since 1800, this reflecting the ICS’s position since 2003 as part of the University’s School of Humanities and Social Sciences (HuSS). As well as encouraging university level research, the ICS: Delivers a part-time taught Master’s degree in Cornish Studies Supervises students studying for research degrees in Cornish Studies (MPhil/PhD) We also offer Cornish and Celtic Studies as part of two, full-time Joint Honours degrees: BA in Modern Celtic Studies and Humanities and BA in Cornish Studies and Humanities (subject to accreditation). These degrees offer a flexible way of combining study of the Celtic regions and nations of Europe with the disciplines of History, Politics or English. Hosts externally funded projects Provides consultancy on Cornwall, its society and its heritage Please contact us for more information.
Bernard Deacon, Cornwall: a concise history, University of Wales Press. This surveys Cornish history and traces the creative tensions produced by the dual influences of its English and non-English past, addressing its current paradox as nation, region and county all wrapped into one. Philip Payton, Making Moonta: The invention of Australia's Little Cornwall, University of Exeter Press. This book relates the story of Moonta and its special place in Cornish transnational identity. The book charts the rise and fall of its copper mines after 1860 and the role of institutions such as Methodism and trade unions in fostering the Cornishness at the centre of the Moonta myth. |
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| The University of Exeter, Cornwall Campus, Penryn, Cornwall, UK, TR10 9EZ Telephone: +44 (0)1326 371800 Copyright and Disclaimer Text too small? |
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