Legislative Documents

Legislative Documents
Author: Iowa
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1756
Release: 1915
Genre: Iowa
ISBN:

Contains the reports of state departments and officials for the preceding fiscal biennium.

Catalogue

Catalogue
Author: Maggs Bros
Publisher:
Total Pages: 1064
Release: 1928
Genre: Books
ISBN:

The Heart of Midlothian

The Heart of Midlothian
Author: Walter Scott
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 628
Release: 1982
Genre: Fiction
ISBN:

The Heart of Mid-Lothian is precisely focused on the trials for murder of John Porteous and of Effie Deans in 1736 and 1737. It is the most complex of all Scott's narratives.

The Afterlives of Walter Scott

The Afterlives of Walter Scott
Author: Ann Rigney
Publisher: Oxford University Press on Demand
Total Pages: 347
Release: 2012-03-08
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0199644012

Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832), once an immensely popular writer, is now largely forgotten. This book explores how works like Waverley, Ivanhoe, and Rob Roy percolated into all aspects of cultural and social life in the nineteenth century, and how his work continues to resonate into the present day even if Scott is no longer widely read.

Gendering Walter Scott

Gendering Walter Scott
Author: C.M. Jackson-Houlston
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 283
Release: 2017-04-21
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 131712958X

Employing gender as a unifying critical focus, Caroline Jackson-Houlston draws on the full range of Walter Scott’s novels to propose new links between Scott and Romantic-era authors such as Sophia Lee, Jane Porter, Jane Austen, Sydney Owenson, Elizabeth Hands, Thomas Love Peacock, and Robert Bage. In Scott, Jackson-Houlston suggests, sex and violence are united in a central feature of the genre of romance, the trope of raptus—the actual or threatened kidnapping of a woman and her subjection to physical or psychic violence. Though largely favouring the Romantic-period drive towards delicacy of subject-matter and expression, Scott also exhibited a residual sympathy for frankness and openness resisted by his publishers, especially towards the end of his career, when he increasingly used the freedoms inherent in romance as a mode of narrative to explore and critique gender assumptions. Thus, while Scott’s novels inherit a tradition of chivalric protectiveness towards women, they both exploit and challenge the assumption that a woman is always essentially definable as a potential sexual victim. Moreover, he consistently condemns the aggressive male violence characteristic of older models of the hero, in favour of restraint and domesticity that are not exclusively feminine, but compatible with the Scottish Enlightenment assumptions of his upbringing. A high proportion of Scott’s female characters are consistently more rational than their male counterparts, illustrating how he plays conflicting concepts of sexual difference off against one another. Jackson-Houlston illuminates Scott’s ambivalent reliance on the attractions of sex and violence, demonstrating how they enable the interrogation of gender convention throughout his fiction.