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Marriage in James Hogg’s Work: Plotting for Gender, Class, and Ethnic Equality: SCROLL: Scottish Cultural Review of Language and Literature, cartea 32

Autor Barbara Leonardi
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 20 iul 2022
Throughout his career, self-taught Scottish writer James Hogg (1770-1835) violated literary proprieties which discouraged the frank treatment of prostitution, infanticide, and the violence of war. Contemporary reviewers received Hogg’s bluntness rather fiercely because, in so doing, he questioned the ideologies of chastity, marriage and military masculinities that informed emerging discourses of the British Empire. This book reveals the strategic use that Hogg made of the marriage plot to challenge the civilising ideal of the motherly heroine as well as martial and sentimental masculinities which supported the discourse of a strong but tamed national vigour, thereby highlighting Hogg’s critical use of gender stereotypes in relation to norms of class and ethnicity when deconstructing this plot convention.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004519435
ISBN-10: 9004519432
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria SCROLL: Scottish Cultural Review of Language and Literature


Notă biografică

Barbara Leonardi earned her AHRC-funded PhD in English Studies from Stirling University (2013) with a thesis awarded ‘The Professor G. Ross Roy Medal’. She edited Intersections of Gender, Class, and Race in the Long Nineteenth Century and Beyond (2018)

Cuprins

1 Introduction: James Hogg, a Counter-culture Voice
1Who was James Hogg?
2Exploding the Marriage Plot and the Family Metaphor for the Nation
3Hogg, Literary Dialogism, and Early Nineteenth-century Politeness
4Hogg's Intersectional Dialogue with Stereotypes of Gender, Class, and Ethnicity
5Summary of the Chapters
2 Exploding the Marriage Plot
1The Three Perils Novels and the Ideology of the Marriage Plot
2The Witches' Marriage to the Devil: A 'True Emblem of all Worldly Grandeur'
3The Chronotope of the Asylum: A Subversive Literary Space
4Violating a Maternal Body
3 Scottish Masculinities and the British Empire
1More Than Just Highlanders
2British Masculinities
3Demystifying the Highland Warrior
4Wat o' the Cleuch: A Voracious Scottish Borderer Thief
4 Women's Sexuality and the Scottish Kirk
1The Authority of the Scottish Kirk
2Child Murder and 'The Stool of Repentance'
3When Discourses Clash: Motherhood and Child Murder
4Mador of the Moor and the Fairies' Abduction of Unchristened Children
5'Maria's Tale' and the Evils of Female Servants' Seduction
6Bell Calvert and the Tragic World of 'Women of Ill Fame'
5 Unconventional Heroines
1Introduction: When Primary and Secondary Heroines Merge
2'There is Neither Sin Nor Shame in Being Unwedded, but There May Be Baith in Joining Yourself to an Unbeliever': Choosing Spinsterhood When There are no Heroes
3'Maid of Dunedin, I'm the King o' the Mountain and Fairy School'
6 James Hogg and the North American Literary Market
1Networking with the United States
2The Ettrick Shepherd in the American Periodical Press
3'Bruce and the Spider': The Voice of Abolitionism and Independence
4'Tales of Fathers and Daughters': Crossing Class Boundaries in the Marriage Plot
7 Conclusion: Reflecting on Hogg's Position in the Literary Canon

Bibliography
Index