
ABOUT THIS BOOK
PUBLISHER: Brill
FORMAT: Hardback
ISBN: 9789004317444
PAGES: 304
PUBLICATION DATE:
May 19, 2016
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Community In Modern Scottish Literature
Scott Lyall
Community in Modern Scottish Literature is the first book to examine representations and theories of community in Scottish writing of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries across a broad range of authors and from various conceptual perspectives. The leading scholars in the field examine work in the novel, poetry, and drama, by key Scottish authors such as MacDiarmid, Kelman, and Galloway, as well as less well known writers. This includes postmodern and postcolonial readings, analysis of writing by gay and Gaelic authors, alongside theorists of community such as Nancy, Bauman, Delanty, Cohen, Blanchot, and Anderson. This book will unsettle and yet broaden traditional conceptions of community in Scotland and Scottish literature, suggesting a more plural idea of what community might be.
Scott Lyall
Scott Lyall’s main research interests are Modernism and Scottish Literature, especially of the 1920s and ’30s. His book Hugh MacDiarmid’s Poetry and Politics of Place: Imagining a Scottish Republic (Edinburgh University Press, 2006) emerged from doctoral study at the University of St Andrews and a spell as postdoctoral research fellow in Scottish and Irish Studies at Trinity College Dublin. He is co-editor of The Edinburgh Companion to Hugh MacDiarmid (2011) and editor of a recently published volume on the work of Lewis Grassic Gibbon (ASLS, 2015). He is currently lecturer and programme leader for English at Edinburgh Napier University.