Sir Walter Scott: Landscape and LocalityScott was the first British novelist to discover in landscape a literary as well as a pictoral medium, an insight which he exploits to powerful effect in his Scottish novels. Mr Reed's book breaks new ground by demonstrating the originality of Scott's landscapes, in which romantic nature takes its place in a realistic context of people, history, architecture and traditions. The author shows how, as poet and novelist, Scott explores the notion of place to a depth where it operates not merely as dramatic background but as a force which shapes and directs the minds of its inhabitants. This study adds a new dimension to the understanding of Scott's work. |
Comentarios de la gente - Escribir un comentario
No encontramos ningún comentario en los lugares habituales.
Contenido
1 | |
6 | |
The Poems | 23 |
Waverley1814 | 50 |
Guy Mannering 1815 | 69 |
The Antiquary 1816 | 89 |
The Heart of Midlothian 1818 | 100 |
The Bride of Lammermoor 1819 | 122 |
The Pirate 1821 | 135 |
Redgauntlet 1824 | 148 |
Conclusion | 165 |
Notes | 173 |
178 | |
Glossary | 182 |
184 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Términos y frases comunes
ancient Antiquary appears Arthur’s Seat Ashton Ballad Bertram Bewcastle Border Bride of Lammermoor Canto Castle CHAPTER character Charles Edward conflict Darsie Darsie’s Derncleugh Dinmont Donald Bean Edinburgh Effie Eflie eighteenth century Ellangowan English environment Fast Castle father feeling Fergus fiction fictional field figure find fine fire first gipsies Glenallan Guy Mannering Heart of Midlothian hero Highland honour influence jacobite jeanie jeanie’s Lady Laird land landscape language later Latimer Letters Liddesdale literary lives locality Lockhart Lord Lucy Mac-Ivor Madge Wildfire Marmion Meg’s Melrose mind Minstrel moral Mucklebackits narrative nature never novel Old Mortality Oldbuck picturesque Pirate poem poetry political Ravenswood Ravenswood estates Redgauntlet reflection Rob Roy romantic ruins scene Scotland Scots Scottish selfish significant Sir Walter Scott smugglers Solway specific Stuart tale theme tion tower tradition Troil Tully-Veolan Waverley Waverley Novels Waverley’s Wolf’s Crag Wordsworth wrote Yellowley young