Acts of Union: Scotland and the Literary Negotiation of the British Nation, 1707-1830Acts of Union explores the political relationship between Scotland and England as it was negotiated in the literary realm in the century after the 1707 Act of Union. It examines Britain, one of the precursors to the modern nation, not as a homogeneous, stable unit, but as a dynamic process, a dialogue between heterogeneous elements. Far from being constituted by a single Act of Union, the author contends, Britain was forged--in all the variant senses of that word--from multiple acts of union and dislocation over time. Accordingly, each of the first five chapters focuses on a discursive encounter between a Scottish and an English writer. Chapter 1 examines the political debate between Daniel Defoe and Lord Belhaven concerning the Act of Union. Chapter 2 considers how Tobias Smollett and Henry Fielding used the novel form to highlight their concerns regarding the state of the nation after the 1745 rebellion. Chapter 3 analyzes the debate between James Macpherson and Samuel Johnson over the poems of Ossian and the origins of British culture, concluding with the crucial role played by James Boswell as a political and cultural mediator. Chapter 4 reads William Wordsworth's renegotiation of Robert Burns's work after the Scottish poet's death as illustrative of the contest for control of the British cultural realm at the end of the eighteenth century. Chapter 5 argues that in his 1830 republication of Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, Walter Scott imagines alternative histories of Britain and of English literature through his negotiations with Thomas Percy and his Scottish predecessors Macpherson and Burns. The concluding chapter considers the use made of the representation of Scottish national difference in the institutionalization of English literature. As well as plotting out specific moments during which writing served both to trouble and to renegotiate the Union of Great Britain, the book considers the articulation of British national identity within more general questions concerning postcolonial theories of the nation, and also sets itself within the current debate about the future of Scotland within Britain. |
Què en diuen els usuaris - Escriviu una ressenya
No hem trobat cap ressenya als llocs habituals.
Continguts
Acts of Union | 1 |
Daniel Defoe Lord Belhaven | 19 |
Henry Fielding Tobias Smollett and | 46 |
James Macpherson Samuel Johnson | 74 |
and William Wordsworth | 107 |
Minstrel Ballads | 144 |
Runes of Empire Scotland and the Margins | 168 |
200 | |
213 | |
Frases i termes més freqüents
According actual ancient appear argues Arnold asserts attempts attention ballads becomes begins Belhaven Boswell Britain British Burns Burns's calls Carlyle Celtic century chapter character claims common concern considered continues critics cultural debate Defoe describes difference draws edition effect England English Essay established examines example existence fact fiction Fielding final Highland idea imagined important indicates interest Jacobite James Johnson kind King language Letters literary literature Lowland Macpherson manners narrative narrator national identity nature notes novel offers original Ossian particular past Percy poem poet poetic poetry political position present printed promote published question readers realm Rebellion regarding relation represents Review Robert says Scotland Scots Scott Scottish seen sense serve Smollett society speech suggests takes tion tradition turn Union vision wants Wordsworth writing written
Referències a aquest llibre
Scotland, Britain, Empire: Writing the Highlands, 1760-1860 Kenneth McNeil Previsualització limitada - 2007 |