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8. Ramsay, Fergusson, Thomson, Davidson and Urban Poetry
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface viii
- 1. Scotland as North Britain: The Historical Background, 1707–1918 1
- 2. A Nation Transformed: Scotland’s Geography, 1707–1918 12
- 3. Standards and Differences: Languages in Scotland, 1707–1918 21
- 4. The International Reception and Literary Impact of Scottish Literature of the Period 1707–1918 33
- 5. Post-Union Scotland and the Scottish Idiom of Britishness 45
- 6. The Emergence of Privacy: Letters, Journals and Domestic Writing 57
- 7. Hume and the Scottish Enlightenment 71
- 8. Ramsay, Fergusson, Thomson, Davidson and Urban Poetry 80
- 9. The Ossianic Revival, James Beattie and Primitivism 90
- 10. Scottish–Irish Connections, 1707–1918 99
- 11. Scottish Song and the Jacobite Cause 105
- 12. Alasdair mac Mhaighstir Alasdair and the New Gaelic Poetry 110
- 13. Orality and Public Poetry 125
- 14. Varieties of Public Performance: Folk Songs, Ballads, Popular Drama and Sermons 133
- 15. Historiography, Biography and Identity 143
- 16. Scotland’s Literature of Empire and Emigration, 1707–1918 153
- 17. Tobias Smollett 163
- 18. Writing Scotland: Robert Burns 169
- 20. Walter Scott 183
- 21. Law Books, 1707–1918 191
- 22. Periodicals, Encyclopaedias and Nineteenth-Century Literary Production 198
- 23. Hogg, Galt, Scott and their Milieu 211
- 24. The Scottish Book Trade at Home and Abroad, 1707–1918 221
- 25. The National Drama, Joanna Baillie and the National Theatre 228
- 26. The Literature of Industrialisation 236
- 27. The Carlyles and Victorianism 244
- 28. Gaelic Literature in the Nineteenth Century 253
- 29. Nineteenth-Century Scottish Thought 267
- 30. Travel Writing, 1707–1918 277
- 31. ‘Half a trade and half an art’: Adult and Juvenile Fiction in the Victorian Period 286
- 32. Nineteenth-Century Scottish Poetry 301
- 33. The Press, Newspaper Fiction and Literary Journalism, 1707–1918 308
- 34. The Kailyard: Problem or Illusion? 317
- 35. Robert Louis Stevenson 324
- 36. J. M. Barrie 331
- 37. Patrick Geddes and the Celtic Revival 338
- 38. The Collectors: John Francis Campbell and Alexander Carmichael 347
- 39. Gaelic Literature and the Diaspora 353
- 40. The Literature of Religious Revival and Disruption 360
- Notes on Contributors – Volume Two 371
- Index 376
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface viii
- 1. Scotland as North Britain: The Historical Background, 1707–1918 1
- 2. A Nation Transformed: Scotland’s Geography, 1707–1918 12
- 3. Standards and Differences: Languages in Scotland, 1707–1918 21
- 4. The International Reception and Literary Impact of Scottish Literature of the Period 1707–1918 33
- 5. Post-Union Scotland and the Scottish Idiom of Britishness 45
- 6. The Emergence of Privacy: Letters, Journals and Domestic Writing 57
- 7. Hume and the Scottish Enlightenment 71
- 8. Ramsay, Fergusson, Thomson, Davidson and Urban Poetry 80
- 9. The Ossianic Revival, James Beattie and Primitivism 90
- 10. Scottish–Irish Connections, 1707–1918 99
- 11. Scottish Song and the Jacobite Cause 105
- 12. Alasdair mac Mhaighstir Alasdair and the New Gaelic Poetry 110
- 13. Orality and Public Poetry 125
- 14. Varieties of Public Performance: Folk Songs, Ballads, Popular Drama and Sermons 133
- 15. Historiography, Biography and Identity 143
- 16. Scotland’s Literature of Empire and Emigration, 1707–1918 153
- 17. Tobias Smollett 163
- 18. Writing Scotland: Robert Burns 169
- 20. Walter Scott 183
- 21. Law Books, 1707–1918 191
- 22. Periodicals, Encyclopaedias and Nineteenth-Century Literary Production 198
- 23. Hogg, Galt, Scott and their Milieu 211
- 24. The Scottish Book Trade at Home and Abroad, 1707–1918 221
- 25. The National Drama, Joanna Baillie and the National Theatre 228
- 26. The Literature of Industrialisation 236
- 27. The Carlyles and Victorianism 244
- 28. Gaelic Literature in the Nineteenth Century 253
- 29. Nineteenth-Century Scottish Thought 267
- 30. Travel Writing, 1707–1918 277
- 31. ‘Half a trade and half an art’: Adult and Juvenile Fiction in the Victorian Period 286
- 32. Nineteenth-Century Scottish Poetry 301
- 33. The Press, Newspaper Fiction and Literary Journalism, 1707–1918 308
- 34. The Kailyard: Problem or Illusion? 317
- 35. Robert Louis Stevenson 324
- 36. J. M. Barrie 331
- 37. Patrick Geddes and the Celtic Revival 338
- 38. The Collectors: John Francis Campbell and Alexander Carmichael 347
- 39. Gaelic Literature and the Diaspora 353
- 40. The Literature of Religious Revival and Disruption 360
- Notes on Contributors – Volume Two 371
- Index 376