James Robertson, brilliant author of The Testament of Gideon Mack, and University of Edinburgh's top prof. Penny Fielding beam in from their respective corners of Scotland. Extensive reference is made to (John's madly beloved) James Hogg and to Robert Louis Stevenson, especially his Jack-the-Ripperesque Jekyll and Hyde. The violence that underpins slavery, aye, even in Scotland, and even during the enduringly influential Scottish Enlightenment is dredged up, as is the question of feeling implicated in the legacy of an enslaving system. James sketches a generous theory about what and how a novel signifies: it is simply asleep until a reader picks it up and invests imagination into it. Hints are dropped regarding James's newest novel, News of...
Travel abroad in the early nineteenth century, especially to the British Isles, not only shaped Nort...
The publication of Robert Lewis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in January o...
Robert Louis Stevenson is well known as a writer of popular Victorian adventures, yet much of his fi...
Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson was born in Edinburgh in 1850. Stevenson, besides his author...
Suggests that Robertson\u27s first novel, chiefly concerned with 17th century Scotland, already show...
Recommends Robertson\u27s novel, based on the true story of the Jamaican slave who in 1778 successfu...
Alison Jack uses works of Scottish literature, both classic and contemporary, as a way into McIntyr...
L'œuvre de Walter Scott (1771–1832), James Hogg (1770–1835) et Robert Louis Stevenson (1850–1894) es...
Alison Jack uses works of Scottish literature, both classic and contemporary, as a way into McIntyre...
Novel Dialogue sits down with Michael Johnston of Purdue University and George Saunders, master of t...
This chapter takes its place in a predominantly historical collection of essays to consider the role...
An analysis of the relationship between the two authors, their debates over romance and realism and ...
In James Robertson's 2006 novel, the protagonist, Gideon Mack, a minister of the Scottish Kirk in th...
Graduation date: 2013A majority of eighteenth-century novels remain in regular print over two hundre...
Discusses critical responses to James Robertson’s novels The Fanatic (2000) and The Testament of Gid...
Travel abroad in the early nineteenth century, especially to the British Isles, not only shaped Nort...
The publication of Robert Lewis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in January o...
Robert Louis Stevenson is well known as a writer of popular Victorian adventures, yet much of his fi...
Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson was born in Edinburgh in 1850. Stevenson, besides his author...
Suggests that Robertson\u27s first novel, chiefly concerned with 17th century Scotland, already show...
Recommends Robertson\u27s novel, based on the true story of the Jamaican slave who in 1778 successfu...
Alison Jack uses works of Scottish literature, both classic and contemporary, as a way into McIntyr...
L'œuvre de Walter Scott (1771–1832), James Hogg (1770–1835) et Robert Louis Stevenson (1850–1894) es...
Alison Jack uses works of Scottish literature, both classic and contemporary, as a way into McIntyre...
Novel Dialogue sits down with Michael Johnston of Purdue University and George Saunders, master of t...
This chapter takes its place in a predominantly historical collection of essays to consider the role...
An analysis of the relationship between the two authors, their debates over romance and realism and ...
In James Robertson's 2006 novel, the protagonist, Gideon Mack, a minister of the Scottish Kirk in th...
Graduation date: 2013A majority of eighteenth-century novels remain in regular print over two hundre...
Discusses critical responses to James Robertson’s novels The Fanatic (2000) and The Testament of Gid...
Travel abroad in the early nineteenth century, especially to the British Isles, not only shaped Nort...
The publication of Robert Lewis Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in January o...
Robert Louis Stevenson is well known as a writer of popular Victorian adventures, yet much of his fi...