This article discusses the ways in which James Macpherson's Poems of Ossian engage with other literary texts within their footnotes, adopting David Hopkins's notion of ‘conversing with antiquity’ to articulate how Macpherson conveys meaning and seeks to establish poetic characteristics through this interaction with other forms of expression. Attention to this process leads to a discussion of the dramatic qualities of Ossian as discussed by Macpherson and Hugh Blair, concluding with a discussion of Ossian's contribution to an emerging understanding of primitive dramatic forms, comparing the ways in which criticism understands Ossian and Aeschylus during the 1760s and 1770s
The Poems of Ossian (1760, 1765) by James Macpherson are considered the most famous literary hoax in...
This is an invited contribution to the special Ossian in the Twenty-first Century issue of the Journ...
The purpose of this contribution has been to examine a portion of the Ossianic corpus as it was tran...
This thesis locates James Macpherson's The Poems of Ossian (1760-1763) within a range of contexts in...
When James Macpherson's Fragments of Ancient Poetry, Collected in the Highlands of Scotland, and Tra...
In 1760 James Macpherson published the first volume of a series of epic poems which he claimed to ha...
In 1760 James Macpherson published the first volume of a series of epic poems which he claimed to ha...
Conference paperControversies over legitimacy are an essential part of the literary reception and c...
In the spring of 1802, the painter Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy de Trioson first exhibited his Ossia...
Scotland, and Translated from the Galic or Erse Language appeared in 1760, it was greeted with wides...
2016 is the twentieth anniversary of the publication of the landmark edition of the Poems of Ossian ...
When James Macpherson turned to the popular poetry of ancient Scotland, he found in it what philosop...
Relates James Macpherson\u27s Fragments of Ancient Poetry (1760) and other Ossianic poems to evolvin...
If Ossian validated the Highland landscape for eighteenth-century tourists, the landscape, in turn, ...
This thesis will explore the influence of The Poems of Ossian and the subsequent Ossianic debate on ...
The Poems of Ossian (1760, 1765) by James Macpherson are considered the most famous literary hoax in...
This is an invited contribution to the special Ossian in the Twenty-first Century issue of the Journ...
The purpose of this contribution has been to examine a portion of the Ossianic corpus as it was tran...
This thesis locates James Macpherson's The Poems of Ossian (1760-1763) within a range of contexts in...
When James Macpherson's Fragments of Ancient Poetry, Collected in the Highlands of Scotland, and Tra...
In 1760 James Macpherson published the first volume of a series of epic poems which he claimed to ha...
In 1760 James Macpherson published the first volume of a series of epic poems which he claimed to ha...
Conference paperControversies over legitimacy are an essential part of the literary reception and c...
In the spring of 1802, the painter Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy de Trioson first exhibited his Ossia...
Scotland, and Translated from the Galic or Erse Language appeared in 1760, it was greeted with wides...
2016 is the twentieth anniversary of the publication of the landmark edition of the Poems of Ossian ...
When James Macpherson turned to the popular poetry of ancient Scotland, he found in it what philosop...
Relates James Macpherson\u27s Fragments of Ancient Poetry (1760) and other Ossianic poems to evolvin...
If Ossian validated the Highland landscape for eighteenth-century tourists, the landscape, in turn, ...
This thesis will explore the influence of The Poems of Ossian and the subsequent Ossianic debate on ...
The Poems of Ossian (1760, 1765) by James Macpherson are considered the most famous literary hoax in...
This is an invited contribution to the special Ossian in the Twenty-first Century issue of the Journ...
The purpose of this contribution has been to examine a portion of the Ossianic corpus as it was tran...