Home Literary Studies 28. Gaelic Literature in the Nineteenth Century
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28. Gaelic Literature in the Nineteenth Century

  • Donald E. Meek
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© 2022, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

© 2022, Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh

Chapters in this book

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