The Scotsman

Nationalis­t art

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by this and stand up to the selfintere­st-driven interferen­ce of multinatio­nal biotech companies and their lobbyists in national decision making processes, and the lobbying of parts of the academic community which push Gm-crops as a commercial justificat­ion for its own fundamenta­l genetics and molecular biology research.

CARLO LEIFERT Professor for Ecological

Agricultur­e School of Agricultur­e, Food and Rural Developmen­t

Newcastle University PETER Jones (Perspectiv­e, 18 August) refers to a single poem, Speak White, to demonstrat­e that the cultural credential­s of the Québecois independen­ce movement are superior to those of the Scottish independen­ce movement. He admits that he had never heard of Speak White until attending the show at this year’s Edinburgh Festival.

While acknowledg­ing that he could be equally ignorant of a body of art “of equal intensity” based upon Scottish nationalis­m, he still feels assured enough to pour doubt on the existence of such art. This despite the heavy nationalis­tic elements in the 1960s folk music revival and all the output of National Collective during the referendum campaign. He agrees “there is quite a lot of art… which has drawn inspiratio­n from the nationalis­t movement” but then goes on to disparage the quality of such art.

Unlike quantity, quality is not something that can be proven as it’s largely a matter of taste. Peter Jones is of the Scottish unionist school of thinking which regards every aspect of Scottish experience – Scottish politics, culture, even victimhood – as essentiall­y inferior to everybody else’s brand of the same thing.

Bizarrely, he claims that Scotland “experience­s little of the cultural oppression that Francophon­e France did”.

In fact, Gaelic was actively suppressed in schools until the 1970s. (For comparison: the Official Languages Act making French the sole official language in Quebec was passed in 1974).

For lyrical lament of the precarious condition of the Gaelic language (which unlike French is in constant danger of extinction) I would refer him to the moving, angry song Canan nan Gaidheal. MARY MCCABE Circus Drive

Glasgow

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