Scottish Literature in English and ScotsDouglas Gifford, Sarah Dunnigan, Alan MacGillivray, Beth Dickson Edinburgh University Press, 2002 - 1269 Seiten This substantial new volume is a stimulating yet in-depth introduction to Scottish literature in English and Scots. From medieval to modern, the entire range of literature is introduced, examined and explored. Aimed primarily at those with an interest in Scottish literature, this guide also responds to the need for students and teachers to have detailed discussions of individual authors and texts.The volume looks at Scottish literature in six period sections: Early Scottish Literature, Eighteenth-Century, The Age of Scott, Victorian and Edwardian, The Twentieth-Century Scottish Literary Renaissance, and Scottish Literature since 1945. Each section begins with an overview of the period, followed by several chapters examining exemplary authors and texts. Each section finishes with an extensive discussion including suggestions as to how to further explore the rich and often neglected hinterlands of Scottish writing. Extensive reading lists identify primary texts of the period as well as details of a wide range of additional authors. Opening up neglected areas of study as well as responding to the burgeoning interest in novelists, modern poets and dramatists, this book serves as an invaluable guide to Scottish Literature. |
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... seems , for example , unsure whether to maintain the representation of the ' unweeping ' inhabitants of the city ( there will be weeping later ) ; and in lines 47-9 he suggests that the inhabitants are sleeping or dead or fled from ...
... seems , for example , unsure whether to maintain the representation of the ' unweeping ' inhabitants of the city ( there will be weeping later ) ; and in lines 47-9 he suggests that the inhabitants are sleeping or dead or fled from ...
Seite 393
... seems to underscore a society which has lost intimacy and vitality and does seem to express something of the suffocating social pretension which was so often censured by novelists like Dickens and Eliot and by poets like Browning and ...
... seems to underscore a society which has lost intimacy and vitality and does seem to express something of the suffocating social pretension which was so often censured by novelists like Dickens and Eliot and by poets like Browning and ...
Seite 413
... seems supremely ' rational ' and restrained , like the ' public ' Jekyll , who , we learn in his ' full statement ' had ' an imperious desire to ... wear a more than commonly grave counte- nance before the public ' . In some ways ...
... seems supremely ' rational ' and restrained , like the ' public ' Jekyll , who , we learn in his ' full statement ' had ' an imperious desire to ... wear a more than commonly grave counte- nance before the public ' . In some ways ...
Inhalt
Medieval Poetry | 3 |
Robert Henryson and William Dunbar | 16 |
Ane Satyre and Philotus | 32 |
Urheberrecht | |
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