Beside the Bard: Scottish Lowland Poetry in the Age of Burns
Beside the Bard argues that Scottish poetry in the age of Burns reclaims not a single past, dominated and overwritten by the unitary national language of an elite ruling class, but a past that conceptualizes the Scottish nation in terms of local self-identification, linguistic multiplicity, cultural and religious difference, and transnational political and cultural affiliations. This fluid conception of the nation may accommodate a post-Union British self-identification, but it also recognizes the instrumental and historically contingent nature of “Britishness.” Whether male or female, loyalist or radical, literati or autodidacts, poets such as Alexander Wilson, Carolina Olyphant, Robert Tannahill, and John Lapraik, among others, adamantly refuse to imagine a single nation, British or otherwise, instead preferring an open, polyvocal field, on which they can stage new national and personal formations and fight new revolutions. In this sense, “Scotland” is a revolutionary category, always subject to creative destruction and reformation.

Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press. 
1132505352
Beside the Bard: Scottish Lowland Poetry in the Age of Burns
Beside the Bard argues that Scottish poetry in the age of Burns reclaims not a single past, dominated and overwritten by the unitary national language of an elite ruling class, but a past that conceptualizes the Scottish nation in terms of local self-identification, linguistic multiplicity, cultural and religious difference, and transnational political and cultural affiliations. This fluid conception of the nation may accommodate a post-Union British self-identification, but it also recognizes the instrumental and historically contingent nature of “Britishness.” Whether male or female, loyalist or radical, literati or autodidacts, poets such as Alexander Wilson, Carolina Olyphant, Robert Tannahill, and John Lapraik, among others, adamantly refuse to imagine a single nation, British or otherwise, instead preferring an open, polyvocal field, on which they can stage new national and personal formations and fight new revolutions. In this sense, “Scotland” is a revolutionary category, always subject to creative destruction and reformation.

Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press. 
42.95 In Stock
Beside the Bard: Scottish Lowland Poetry in the Age of Burns

Beside the Bard: Scottish Lowland Poetry in the Age of Burns

by George S. Christian
Beside the Bard: Scottish Lowland Poetry in the Age of Burns

Beside the Bard: Scottish Lowland Poetry in the Age of Burns

by George S. Christian

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Overview

Beside the Bard argues that Scottish poetry in the age of Burns reclaims not a single past, dominated and overwritten by the unitary national language of an elite ruling class, but a past that conceptualizes the Scottish nation in terms of local self-identification, linguistic multiplicity, cultural and religious difference, and transnational political and cultural affiliations. This fluid conception of the nation may accommodate a post-Union British self-identification, but it also recognizes the instrumental and historically contingent nature of “Britishness.” Whether male or female, loyalist or radical, literati or autodidacts, poets such as Alexander Wilson, Carolina Olyphant, Robert Tannahill, and John Lapraik, among others, adamantly refuse to imagine a single nation, British or otherwise, instead preferring an open, polyvocal field, on which they can stage new national and personal formations and fight new revolutions. In this sense, “Scotland” is a revolutionary category, always subject to creative destruction and reformation.

Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press. 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781684481835
Publisher: Bucknell University Press
Publication date: 03/13/2020
Series: Transits: Literature, Thought & Culture, 1650-1850
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 232
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

GEORGE S. CHRISTIAN teaches British and world literature at the University of Texas at Austin. He holds a law degree and doctorates in English and history from the University of Texas and practices law in Austin. He has published articles in Nineteenth-Century Studies, The Hardy Review, Dickens Studies Annual, LIT: Literature Interpretation, Theory, European Romantic Review, and other scholarly journals. He and his wife, Betsy Christian, have also authored two books on Texas history for children and young adults.
 

Table of Contents


Introduction
            Lowland Scottish Poetry in the “Age of Burns”
1          Burns’s Ayrshire “Bardies”: John Lapraik and David Sillar
2          Burns and the Women “Peasant Poets,” Janet Little and Isobel Pagan
3          Alexander Wilson and the Price of Radicalism
4          Lady Nairne, Burns’s Jacobite Other
5          “In the Shadow of Burns”: Robert Tannahill
6          Burns and the Jacobins, James Kennedy and Alexander Geddes
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Bibliography
Index
 
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