Scottish Women's Writing in the Long Nineteenth Century: The Romance of Everyday Life

Scottish Women's Writing in the Long Nineteenth Century: The Romance of Everyday Life

by Juliet Shields
Scottish Women's Writing in the Long Nineteenth Century: The Romance of Everyday Life

Scottish Women's Writing in the Long Nineteenth Century: The Romance of Everyday Life

by Juliet Shields

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Overview

Walter Scott's tales of chivalry and adventure inaugurated a masculinized Scottish romance tradition that celebrated a sublime and heroic version of Scotland. Nineteenth-century Scotswomen responded to Scott's influence by establishing a counter-tradition of unromantic or even anti-romantic representations of Scotland. Their novels challenged the long-standing claim that Scotland lacked any equivalent to the English realist novel. In turning from the past to the present and from the sublimity of Scott's Highland landscapes to farmhouses, factories, and suburban villas, Scottish women writers brought romance to everyday life, illuminating the magnificence of the mundane. Drawing on the evangelical discourses emerging from the splintering of the Presbyterian Church in 1843, they represented fiction as a form of spiritual comfort, an antidote to the dreary monotony and petty frustrations of daily existence. This volume introduces the previously overlooked tradition of nineteenth-century Scottish women's writing, and corrects previously male-dominated histories of the Scottish novel.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781316518267
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 07/29/2021
Series: Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture
Pages: 220
Product dimensions: 6.22(w) x 9.25(h) x 0.63(d)

About the Author

JULIET SHIELDS is a Professor of English at the University of Washington. She is also the author of Sentimental Literature and Anglo-Scottish Identity (2010) and Nation and Migration: the Making of British Atlantic Literature (2016).

Table of Contents

Introduction: The Scottish Novel after Scott; 1. Oliphant, Scott, and the Novelist's Trade; 2. Annie S. Swan's Friendly Fiction; 3. The Scottish New Woman and the Art of Self-Sacrifice; 4. The Colonial Adventure Story and the Return of Romance; 5. Scottish Modernism and Middlebrow Aesthetics; Conclusion: The Ethics and Politics of Transfiguring the Commonplace.
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