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Renovating affections: Reconstructing the Atholl family in the mid-eighteenth century

Broomhall, Susan
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Abstract
In 1751, James Murray, the second Duke of Atholl (1690–1764), wrote to his nephew, John Murray, who was then enjoying a tour of the continent at his uncle’s expense, and asked him to look out for portraits of William of Nassau, Prince of Orange, and his third wife, Charlotte de Bourbon. These images were to form part of an elaborate dynastic representational scheme that he would display in his renovated family seat in Perthshire, Atholl House. These renovations would become a key topic within an emotive correspondence bonding James Murray and the nephew who would in time become his heir. This chapter explores how the eighteenth-century Atholl family, and James Murray and his nephew John Murray in particular, developed spaces for feeling in physical, material, and conceptual locations – through the renovation of Atholl House, within letters, and as familial, dynastic, and political communities. They did so in the context of sociable and emotional divisions within the family over individual choices that were made by its members to support either Jacobite or Hanoverian policies during the tumultuous years of the first half of the eighteenth century in Scotland. These were deep rifts that laid the Atholl dynasty open to external scrutiny and caused internal questioning of its identity and future. The construction of such spaces was a vital part of the process of dynastic renewal in this context, and was practised by the formation or confirmation of particular sociabilities among its members; that is, communities of individuals that sustained shared goals among their exclusive membership and which were enacted through distinctive emotional acts, expressions, and performances. Emotions thus defined power structures among individuals and shaped experiences of inclusion and exclusion from specific collective formations.
Keywords
Date
2015
Type
Book chapter
Journal
Book
Spaces for Feeling: Emotions and Sociabilities in Britain, 1650-1850
Volume
Issue
Page Range
52-78
Article Number
ACU Department
Institute for Religion and Critical Inquiry
Faculty of Theology and Philosophy
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Open Access Status
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