But as Colin McArthur argues in his provocative book Brigadoon, Braveheart and the Scots , these "definitive" portrayals are often little more than that have deeply distorted how the world (and even Scots themselves) view Scottish history. 1. The "Tartanry" of Brigadoon
It paints the country as a backward, "fossilized" society. McArthur notes that while the film has charm, it treats Scotland as a quaint museum piece rather than a living nation with its own modern agency. 2. The "Noble Savage" of Braveheart Brigadoon, Braveheart and the Scots: Distortion...
For many across the globe, "Scotland" is a series of cinematic snapshots: misty glens appearing once a century, warriors in blue face paint screaming for freedom, and a landscape perpetually trapped in a romantic, pre-modern dream. But as Colin McArthur argues in his provocative