Chapter
Publicly Available
Bibliographic Note
-
Ina Ferris
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Bibliographic Note xi
- Introduction 1
-
Part One: Scott and the Status of the Novel
- 1. Critical Tropes: The Republic of Letters, Female Reading, and Feminine Writing 19
- 2. Utility, Gender, and the Canon: The Example of Maria Edgeworth 60
- 3. A Manly Intervention: Waverley, the Female Field, and Male Romance 79
- 4. From "National Tale" to "Historical Novel": Edgeworth, Morgan, and Scott 105
-
Part Two: Defining the Historical Novel
- 5. The Problem of Generic Propriety: Contesting Scott's Historical Novel 137
- 6. Constructing the Past: Old Mortality and the Counterfictions of Galt and Hogg 161
- 7. "Authentic History" and the Project of the Historical Novel 195
- 8. Establishing the Author of Waverley: The Canonical Moment of Ivanhoe 237
- Index 257
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments ix
- Bibliographic Note xi
- Introduction 1
-
Part One: Scott and the Status of the Novel
- 1. Critical Tropes: The Republic of Letters, Female Reading, and Feminine Writing 19
- 2. Utility, Gender, and the Canon: The Example of Maria Edgeworth 60
- 3. A Manly Intervention: Waverley, the Female Field, and Male Romance 79
- 4. From "National Tale" to "Historical Novel": Edgeworth, Morgan, and Scott 105
-
Part Two: Defining the Historical Novel
- 5. The Problem of Generic Propriety: Contesting Scott's Historical Novel 137
- 6. Constructing the Past: Old Mortality and the Counterfictions of Galt and Hogg 161
- 7. "Authentic History" and the Project of the Historical Novel 195
- 8. Establishing the Author of Waverley: The Canonical Moment of Ivanhoe 237
- Index 257