This essay introduces and explores some explicitly theological concerns in the work of the Orcadian poet, novelist, and dramatist George Mackay Brown (1921–96). More specifically, its interest is with Brown’s presentation and treatment of the notion of time. Drawing on examples from a wide selection of his work, it is argued that Brown’s conversion to Roman Catholicism, and in particular his delight in the enchantment of the Mass, allowed him to exploit a distinctly Catholic sacramental theology and aesthetic of creation – its location, people, and history – appraised in light of the Eucharist
Discusses the religious beliefs and writings of the Scottish poet Tom Scott (1918-1995), both as a c...
Discusses the treatment of religious belief in the Gaelic poetry of Derick Thomson (1921-2012), from...
George MacDonald is known now chiefly for his fantasies and fairy tales. His poetry has been largely...
This thesis represents the first extensive examination of the ‘faithful fictions’ of the Orkney writ...
Compares the early manuscript and published text of a short story Celia, by the Scottish Orcadian ...
Suggests that attitudes to Presbyterianism and the Scottish Kirk in much 20th century Scottish liter...
George Mackay Brown (1921–1996), an Orcadian poet, author and dramatist, was undoubtedly one of the ...
George Mackay Brown (1921–1996), an Orcadian poet, author and dramatist, was undoubtedly one of the ...
The novels of George Mackay Brown have often been read as upholding a traditional ideal of community...
For her part of the contribution, identifies the fiction of G. M. Brown as a series of variation upo...
This essay looks at George Mackay Brown's novel of 1992, Vinland, in the context of nineteenth- and ...
In this thesis, I analyze five short stories representative of George Mackay Brown’s engagement with...
The novels of George Mackay Brown have often been read as upholding a traditional ideal of community...
This thesis aims to urge consideration of George Mackay Brown (1921-96) as a writer of deeper politi...
George MacDonald (1824-1905) has often been recognized as a pioneering fantasy writer, an heir of th...
Discusses the religious beliefs and writings of the Scottish poet Tom Scott (1918-1995), both as a c...
Discusses the treatment of religious belief in the Gaelic poetry of Derick Thomson (1921-2012), from...
George MacDonald is known now chiefly for his fantasies and fairy tales. His poetry has been largely...
This thesis represents the first extensive examination of the ‘faithful fictions’ of the Orkney writ...
Compares the early manuscript and published text of a short story Celia, by the Scottish Orcadian ...
Suggests that attitudes to Presbyterianism and the Scottish Kirk in much 20th century Scottish liter...
George Mackay Brown (1921–1996), an Orcadian poet, author and dramatist, was undoubtedly one of the ...
George Mackay Brown (1921–1996), an Orcadian poet, author and dramatist, was undoubtedly one of the ...
The novels of George Mackay Brown have often been read as upholding a traditional ideal of community...
For her part of the contribution, identifies the fiction of G. M. Brown as a series of variation upo...
This essay looks at George Mackay Brown's novel of 1992, Vinland, in the context of nineteenth- and ...
In this thesis, I analyze five short stories representative of George Mackay Brown’s engagement with...
The novels of George Mackay Brown have often been read as upholding a traditional ideal of community...
This thesis aims to urge consideration of George Mackay Brown (1921-96) as a writer of deeper politi...
George MacDonald (1824-1905) has often been recognized as a pioneering fantasy writer, an heir of th...
Discusses the religious beliefs and writings of the Scottish poet Tom Scott (1918-1995), both as a c...
Discusses the treatment of religious belief in the Gaelic poetry of Derick Thomson (1921-2012), from...
George MacDonald is known now chiefly for his fantasies and fairy tales. His poetry has been largely...