Chapter
Publicly Available
Frontmatter
-
Steven J. Reid
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Tables and Figures vii
- Acknowledgements xi
- The Contributors xv
- Abbreviations and Conventions xviii
- Introduction The Afterlife of Mary, Queen of Scots: Themes and Paradigms 1
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Part One Mary in Contemporary Objects
- 1 Damnatio Memoriae: Mary, Queen of Scots’ Iconography and the Ham House Portrait of Sir John Maitland of Thirlestane 31
- 2 New Perspectives on the Sheffield Portraits of Mary, Queen of Scots including the Discovery of a New, Related, Contemporary Portrait 53
- 3 Memorialising (in) Mary, Queen of Scots’ Books of Hours 84
- 4 The Afterlives of Mary’s Letters 106
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Part Two Mary in Literature and History
- 5 Editing and Collecting Mary, Queen of Scots in the Eighteenth Century: James Anderson (1662–1728) and Dr William Hunter (1718–83) 123
- 6 The Battle for Memory: The Reception of Mary, Queen of Scots in the Eighteenth-century British Periodical Press 142
- 7 ‘Deeply impressed upon the imagination’: The Return of Mary in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries 160
- 8 ‘A tracked and hunted creature’: Mary, Queen of Scots and the Histories of David Hay Fleming, Andrew Lang, Gordon Donaldson and Antonia Fraser 179
- 9 Re-imagining Mary, Queen of Scots in Contemporary Scottish Women’s Writing 197
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Part Three Collecting and Displaying Mary
- 10 Collecting and Exhibiting Marian Objects in Nineteenth-century Britain 219
- 11 ‘The most interesting apartment in Scotland’: The History and Presentation of Mary, Queen of Scots’ Chambers at the Palace of Holyroodhouse 241
- 12 Materialising Mary in a Museum: Marian Objects and Authenticity 267
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Part Four Mary in Media
- 13 Minstrels of Maelstroms: Mary’s Musical Afterlives 291
- 14 The Transformations of Mary, Queen of Scots in Early Cinema, 1895–1923 317
- 15 Long Live the Queen: The Afterlife of Mary, Queen of Scots in Contemporary Visual Culture 343
- INDEX 371
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- List of Tables and Figures vii
- Acknowledgements xi
- The Contributors xv
- Abbreviations and Conventions xviii
- Introduction The Afterlife of Mary, Queen of Scots: Themes and Paradigms 1
-
Part One Mary in Contemporary Objects
- 1 Damnatio Memoriae: Mary, Queen of Scots’ Iconography and the Ham House Portrait of Sir John Maitland of Thirlestane 31
- 2 New Perspectives on the Sheffield Portraits of Mary, Queen of Scots including the Discovery of a New, Related, Contemporary Portrait 53
- 3 Memorialising (in) Mary, Queen of Scots’ Books of Hours 84
- 4 The Afterlives of Mary’s Letters 106
-
Part Two Mary in Literature and History
- 5 Editing and Collecting Mary, Queen of Scots in the Eighteenth Century: James Anderson (1662–1728) and Dr William Hunter (1718–83) 123
- 6 The Battle for Memory: The Reception of Mary, Queen of Scots in the Eighteenth-century British Periodical Press 142
- 7 ‘Deeply impressed upon the imagination’: The Return of Mary in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries 160
- 8 ‘A tracked and hunted creature’: Mary, Queen of Scots and the Histories of David Hay Fleming, Andrew Lang, Gordon Donaldson and Antonia Fraser 179
- 9 Re-imagining Mary, Queen of Scots in Contemporary Scottish Women’s Writing 197
-
Part Three Collecting and Displaying Mary
- 10 Collecting and Exhibiting Marian Objects in Nineteenth-century Britain 219
- 11 ‘The most interesting apartment in Scotland’: The History and Presentation of Mary, Queen of Scots’ Chambers at the Palace of Holyroodhouse 241
- 12 Materialising Mary in a Museum: Marian Objects and Authenticity 267
-
Part Four Mary in Media
- 13 Minstrels of Maelstroms: Mary’s Musical Afterlives 291
- 14 The Transformations of Mary, Queen of Scots in Early Cinema, 1895–1923 317
- 15 Long Live the Queen: The Afterlife of Mary, Queen of Scots in Contemporary Visual Culture 343
- INDEX 371