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Dive into the research topics where Benedick Mark Edward Wellings is active.

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Featured researches published by Benedick Mark Edward Wellings.


Nations and Nationalism | 2002

Empire‐nation: national and imperial discourses in England

Benedick Mark Edward Wellings

When the states of England and Scotland combined in 1707, conditions were created whereby English nationalism could merge into British nationalism. With the expansion of empire, English nationalism was expressed through imperial-national discourses allowing English nationalists to claim non-English space when articulating what might be best understood as an Anglo-British nationalism. Accordingly, such discourses largely ‘hid’ what one might now understand as ‘English nationalism’ within a ‘British’ discourse of empire. The case of England illustrates that imperial discourses can become intimately bound up with the ‘national’ discourse of the nations at the core of the imperial structures. Accordingly, it is here argued that imperial and national discourse are not necessarily opposed to each other, but are able to feed into each other, affecting the manner in which ideas of the nation and empire are conceived and articulated.


National Identities | 2007

Rump Britain: Englishness and Britishness, 1992–2001

Benedick Mark Edward Wellings

Conservative adherence to the sovereignty of the Crown-in-Parliament resulted in the merging of English with British consciousness. During the 1990s, Englands political nationalism expressed itself as a defence of Britishness. This defence of Britishness prevented a political English nationalism cohering at a time when political nationalisms had matured in Scotland and Wales. This merging of England and Britain was particularly evident in conservative thinking, given the conservative adherence to the concept of Crown-in-Parliament sovereignty.


Archive | 2009

Nation, History, Museum: The Politics of the Past at the National Museum of Australia

Benedick Mark Edward Wellings

The National Museum of Australia opened its doors to the public on 11 March 2001. Located in Canberra, the federal capital, the Museum was the centre-piece of celebrations marking the centenary of Australia’s federation. As such, the Museum’s director, Dawn Casey, described the AU


Nations and Nationalism | 2010

Losing the peace: Euroscepticism and the foundations of contemporary English nationalism

Benedick Mark Edward Wellings

155 million, state-of-the-art institution as ‘a gift to the nation’. But for some, this was not the sort of present that Australia wanted. In officially opening the Museum, the Prime Minister of Australia, John Howard, seemed somewhat under-whelmed, struggling to find anything positive to say about the new edifice. In his speech, the Prime Minister parsimoniously claimed that ‘Whatever may be said and whatever has already been said about the Museum … [it] will change in a very profound way the enjoyment of life for people who live in the national capital’ (Howard, 2001).


Journal of Common Market Studies | 2015

Euroscepticism and the Anglosphere: Traditions and Dilemmas in Contemporary English Nationalism

Benedick Mark Edward Wellings; Helen Baxendale


Archive | 2012

English nationalism and euroscepticism : losing the peace

Benedick Mark Edward Wellings


Parliamentary Affairs | 2016

Populism and Sovereignty: The EU Act and the In-Out Referendum, 2010–2015

Benedick Mark Edward Wellings; Emma Vines


Archive | 2014

Nation, memory and Great War Commemoration: mobilizing the past in Europe, Australia and New Zealand

Benedick Mark Edward Wellings; Shanti Sumartojo


Australian Journal of Politics and History | 2014

European Integration and the End of an Imperial Consciousness in Britain

Benedick Mark Edward Wellings


Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism | 2003

Britishness and the Failure of Australian Republicanism

Benedick Mark Edward Wellings

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Emma Vines

University of Canberra

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Chris Gifford

University of Huddersfield

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