In this Issue
- Digital-Only Special Edition, 2019
- Issue
- History, Literature, Memory
Scottish Literary Review is the leading international journal for Scottish literary studies. Scottish Literary Review publishes critical and scholarly articles and reviews from around the world. The journal explores Scottish literature through its various social, cultural, historical and philosophical contexts, including theatre and film, and its interactions with literatures from beyond Scotland, and encourages debate on issues of contemporary significance to literary studies.
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Association for Scottish Literary Studiesviewing issue
Digital-Only Special Edition, 2019Table of Contents
- Montrose and Modern Memory: the literary after-life of the first marquis of Montrose
- Originally published: Volume 6, Number 1, Spring/Summer 2014
- pp. 1-27
- Allan Ramsay and Edinburgh: Commemoration in the City of Forgetting
- Originally published: Volume 10, Number 1, Spring/Summer 2018
- pp. 117-137
- ‘A vast o’ bits o’ stories’: Shortreed, Laidlaw and Scott’s Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border
- Originally published: Volume 7, Number 2, Autumn/Winter 2015
- pp. 95-117
- Untrammelled by Theory: Susan Ferrier’s Polyphonic Vision of Scotland and the Union in Marriage
- Originally published: Volume 8, Number 1, Spring/Summer 2016
- pp. 33-48
- The place of history, literature and politics in the 1911 Scottish Exhibition
- Originally published: Volume 7, Number 1, Spring/Summer 2015
- pp. 43-74
- George Mackay Brown's Marian Apocrypha: Iconography and Enculturation in Time in a Red Coat
- Originally published: Volume 5, Number 2, Autumn/Winter 2013
- pp. 81-96
- Angels, Dancers, Mermaids: The Hidden History of Peckham in Muriel Spark’s The Ballad of Peckham Rye
- Originally published: Volume 6, Number 1, Spring/Summer 2014
- pp. 29-46
- ‘Daughter of an Outcast Queen’ – Defying State Expectations in Jenni Fagan’s The Panopticon
- Originally published: Volume 7, Number 1, Spring/Summer 2015
- pp. 113-131
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