Name Murray Pittock | Role Historian | |
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Books The Road to Independence?, Scottish and Irish Romanticism, The invention of Scotland, The myth of the Jacobite, Material Culture and Sedit |
History Scotland Lecture 1: Who were the Jacobites and what did they want for Scotland?
Murray Pittock FRSE (born 5 January 1962) is a Scottish cultural historian, Bradley Professor of Literature at the University of Glasgow and Pro Vice Principal (Special Projects) at the University, where he was previously Vice Principal, Head of the College of Arts and Dean from 2009-15.
Contents
- History Scotland Lecture 1 Who were the Jacobites and what did they want for Scotland
- Biography
- Education and academia
- Academic work
- Honors
- Publications
- References
Previously he was Professor of Scottish and Romantic Literature and Deputy Head of Arts at the University of Manchester, becoming the first ever professor of Scottish Literature at an English university. He has also been a visiting fellow at universities worldwide including: New York University (2015), Notre Dame (2014), Charles University, Prague (2010); Trinity College, Dublin (2008); the University of Wales in advanced Welsh and Celtic studies (2002) and Yale (1998, 2000–01).
Biography
Murray Pittock was born to Malcolm Pittock and Joan Maccormack (formerly Pittock, nee Mould). He grew up in Aberdeen, attending Aberdeen Grammar School, before leaving at the age of 16 to attend the University of Glasgow. His parents were both lecturers in English Literature at the University of Aberdeen), and he developed an interest in literature from an early age, evidenced by his description of the weather as a toddler: “It’s the blasted drizzle puts the fever in my bones”, a misquote from Rudyard Kipling’s Mandalay.
Education and academia
Pittock received his M.A. from the University of Glasgow, and subsequently won the Snell Exhibition to study at Balliol College, Oxford where he completed his D.Phil. During his time at university, Pittock was (with Boris Johnson) Oxford University Debating Champion and a member of the British Isles Debating Team/ESU-USA Tour whilst at Oxford. He recently gave the closing speech in favour of “This House believes in an independent Scotland”, the 30th anniversary of the World Debating Championships’ debate at the University of Glasgow, which was broadcast online by STV.
Pittock was appointed as a lecturer and then, reader, at the University of Edinburgh in 1989. He moved to Glasgow in 1996 to take up a chair in Literature at the University of Strathclyde, also serving as Head of Department. In 2003 Pittock moved to the University of Manchester as Professor of Scottish and Romantic Literature. He took up his current position at the University of Glasgow in 2010.
Academic work
Pittock's books deal with a large variety of subjects including: English, History, Irish Studies, Theology and Politics. He is best-known, however, for his writing on the national identity of Scotland, and has spoken widely on identity and independence, appearing in the media in the UK and overseas over 700 times, including a five-part The Roots of Scottish Nationalism series on Radio 4, and programmes such as Balmoral, which has been repeated 15 times. In 2014, he was cited at Notre Dame as 'Scotland's leading public intellectual'. His book, The Road to Independence? Scotland Since the Sixties, was launched in Catalan with Scotland's First Minister, Alex Salmond, in Port Olympic, Barcelona in 2008.
Heis currently working on a three volume edition of The Scots Musical Museum for the Oxford Burns, funded by the AHRC and on a book, Culloden: The Battle in History, Historiography and Popular Memory for Oxford University Press, as well as a project on the development of the Enlightenment in Edinburgh locations, networks and institutions 1680-1750.
Honors
As well as his career in Scotland and England, Pittock is also a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh (2004) and has been awarded or shortlisted for numerous prizes. He is one of few academics to have given a prize lecture at both the Royal Society of Edinburgh and the British Academy, where he gave Chatterton lecture in poetry in 2002. In 2011-13, he also convened the National Champions’ Group, supporting the introduction and development of Scottish Studies in schools.