The novel Sunset Song by Lewis Grassic Gibbon is in part a modernist work written in opposition to the Kailyard tradition. Therefore it is a realistic work without the idealisation of rural life. The novel deals with the split or duality in characters and their search for identity while the Scottish language has suffered a decline under the shadow of the English rulers. This split or the Caledonian Antisyzygy has been a prevailing element in Scottish literature. Lewis Grassic Gibbon was one of the writers who concerned himself with this supposed superiority of the English language and culture in lieu of the Scots and the dilemma of a literature without a language. Through their duality, the characters communicate Gibbon’s criticism on socie...
Examining his works within the social, political, and literary developments of his time, this volume...
Scottish Scene, or The Intelligent Man’s Guide to Albyn was first published by Jarrolds in 1934. Wid...
The paper studies the ways supporting characters function in contemporary Scottish prose. “Supportiv...
Sunset Song was written in the early 1930s and is still one of the best-known and most-debated Scott...
A common theme in the discussion and analysis of Scottish literature is the concept of duality. Dual...
Neil M. Gunn and Lewis Grassic Gibbon were important figures within the Scottish Literary Renaissanc...
This chapter explores the nexus between nation and gender in Lewis Grassic Gibbon’s A Scots Quair, o...
Discusses the changes in Scottish religious practice and adherence from just before the First World ...
James Leslie Mitchell is better remembered as Lewis Grassic Gibbon, the author of the trilogy A Scot...
Lewis Grassic Gibbon (James Leslie Mitchell), the author of the acclaimed trilogy A Scots Quair – Su...
Surveys the publishing history since World War II of Lewis Grassic Gibbon [James Leslie Mitchell, 19...
A discussion of the treatment and presence of religion in Sunset Song, the first novel in Lewis Gras...
In his The Politics of Modernism: Against the New Conformists Raymond Williams comments on the gradu...
This thesis is an ecocritical reading of A Scots Quair with a focus on agency and perception of plac...
This article focuses on Lewis Grassic Gibbon’s staging of multiple personae both in his life and in ...
Examining his works within the social, political, and literary developments of his time, this volume...
Scottish Scene, or The Intelligent Man’s Guide to Albyn was first published by Jarrolds in 1934. Wid...
The paper studies the ways supporting characters function in contemporary Scottish prose. “Supportiv...
Sunset Song was written in the early 1930s and is still one of the best-known and most-debated Scott...
A common theme in the discussion and analysis of Scottish literature is the concept of duality. Dual...
Neil M. Gunn and Lewis Grassic Gibbon were important figures within the Scottish Literary Renaissanc...
This chapter explores the nexus between nation and gender in Lewis Grassic Gibbon’s A Scots Quair, o...
Discusses the changes in Scottish religious practice and adherence from just before the First World ...
James Leslie Mitchell is better remembered as Lewis Grassic Gibbon, the author of the trilogy A Scot...
Lewis Grassic Gibbon (James Leslie Mitchell), the author of the acclaimed trilogy A Scots Quair – Su...
Surveys the publishing history since World War II of Lewis Grassic Gibbon [James Leslie Mitchell, 19...
A discussion of the treatment and presence of religion in Sunset Song, the first novel in Lewis Gras...
In his The Politics of Modernism: Against the New Conformists Raymond Williams comments on the gradu...
This thesis is an ecocritical reading of A Scots Quair with a focus on agency and perception of plac...
This article focuses on Lewis Grassic Gibbon’s staging of multiple personae both in his life and in ...
Examining his works within the social, political, and literary developments of his time, this volume...
Scottish Scene, or The Intelligent Man’s Guide to Albyn was first published by Jarrolds in 1934. Wid...
The paper studies the ways supporting characters function in contemporary Scottish prose. “Supportiv...