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Romancing the stone: (E)motion and the affective history of the Stone of Scone

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posted on 2023-05-24, 05:42 authored by Marchant, A
The Stone of Scone is neither ornate nor decorative, but rather is plain, heavy, and unwieldy. Yet this stone’s plain appearance is not matched with a plain history; it has been stolen, broken, cracked, and chipped, blown up by Suffragettes, declared a fake, and is the subject of at least one symphony. This is a well-loved stone, but it is also a highly contested object due to its extraordinary function: it can transform men and women into kings and queens. Since time immemorial the stone was key to the inauguration of Scottish monarchs, and it was due to its monarch-making capabilities that the stone was stolen by the English king in 1296, and transported to Westminster Abbey, where it was incorporated into British coronation rituals. This chapter considers the stone’s significance in the context of material culture and emotions, tracing its long, affective history.

History

Publication title

Feeling things: Objects and emotions through history

Editors

S Downes, S Holloway, and S Randles

Pagination

192-208

ISBN

9780198802648

Department/School

School of Humanities

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Place of publication

Oxford

Extent

13

Rights statement

Copyright 2018 Oxford University Press

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Understanding Europe’s past

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