Burns and Tradition

Burns and Tradition
Author: Mary Ellen Brown
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 198
Release: 1984-06-18
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1349070874

The G. Ross Roy Collection of Robert Burns

The G. Ross Roy Collection of Robert Burns
Author: Clayton Carlyle Tarr
Publisher: Univ of South Carolina Press
Total Pages: 498
Release: 2009
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781570038297

"The G. Ross Roy Collection of Robert Burns includes fourteen color and fifty-eight black-and-white illustrations as well as an introduction by G. Ross Roy on the history of the collection. In text and images, the catalogue documents a monumental research collection that serves as an open invitation for further investigations into the life, works, and legacy of Scotland's bard."--BOOK JACKET.

Dooble Tongue

Dooble Tongue
Author: Jeffrey Skoblow
Publisher: University of Delaware Press
Total Pages: 284
Release: 2001
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9780874137286

'Dooble Tongue' is an imaginative meditation on Robert Burns and Scottish poetry, as well as a book that engages and contests the customary assumptions and practices of literary criticism. Beginning with an examination of two contemporary Scottish poets, W.N. Herbert and Robert Crawford, and moving back in time to the Scottish Modernist master Hugh MacDiarmid, then further back to Burns himself, the study of the Scottish tradition is situated in a broad historical context. The focus throughout is on language (particularly Scots), more broadly vernacular literature in relation to culturally elite literary and critical modes- as well as on questions of literary nationalism and the cultural politics of poetic discourse.

Webspinner

Webspinner
Author: John D. Niles
Publisher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
Total Pages: 321
Release: 2022-09-20
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 149684159X

Born in 1928 in a tent on the shore of Loch Fyne, Argyll, Duncan Williamson (d. 2007) eventually came to be recognized as one of the foremost storytellers in Scotland and the world. Webspinner: Songs, Stories, and Reflections of Duncan Williamson, Scottish Traveller is based on more than a hundred hours of tape-recorded interviews undertaken with him in the 1980s. Williamson tells of his birth and upbringing in the west of Scotland, his family background as one of Scotland’s seminomadic travelling people, his varied work experiences after setting out from home at about age fifteen, and the challenges he later faced while raising a family of his own, living on the road for half the year. The recordings on which the book is based were made by John D. Niles, who was then an associate professor at the University of California, Berkeley. Niles has transcribed selections from his field tapes with scrupulous accuracy, arranging them alongside commentary, photos, and other scholarly aids, making this priceless self-portrait of a brilliant storyteller available to the public. The result is a delight to read. It is also a mine of information concerning a vanished way of life and the place of singing and storytelling in Traveller culture. In chapters that feature many colorful anecdotes and that mirror the spontaneity of oral delivery, readers learn much about how Williamson and other members of his persecuted minority had the resourcefulness to make a living on the outskirts of society, owning very little in the way of material goods but sustained by a rich oral heritage.

The Poetry of the Scots

The Poetry of the Scots
Author: Duncan Glen
Publisher: Edinburgh : Edinburgh University Press
Total Pages: 192
Release: 1991
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN:

A unique bibliographical guide and a comprehensive introduction to Scottish poetry from the very earliest times to the present day. It gives a chronological listing of the standard editions of all the major and many of the minor Scottish poets, supplemented by Glen's informative and energetic commentaries.