Marriage in James Hogg’s Work : : Plotting for Gender, Class, and Ethnic Equality / / Barbara Leonardi.

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 th...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:SCROLL: Scottish Cultural Review of Language and Literature ; 32
VerfasserIn:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden ;, Boston : : Brill,, 2022.
Year of Publication:2022
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:SCROLL: Scottish Cultural Review of Language and Literature ; 32.
Physical Description:1 online resource (190 pages)
Notes:A controversial self-taught shepherd who violated the rules of literary decorum to reveal the dark side of the Scottish margins. Through a strategic use of nineteenth-century stereotypes of femininity and masculinity he lays bare the intersection with class and ethnicity in Scotland.
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Table of Contents:
  • 1 Introduction: James Hogg, a Counter-culture Voice
  • 1 Who was James Hogg?
  • 2 Exploding the Marriage Plot and the Family Metaphor for the Nation
  • 3 Hogg, Literary Dialogism, and Early Nineteenth-century Politeness
  • 4 Hogg's Intersectional Dialogue with Stereotypes of Gender, Class, and Ethnicity
  • 5 Summary of the Chapters
  • 2 Exploding the Marriage Plot
  • 1 The Three Perils Novels and the Ideology of the Marriage Plot
  • 2 The Witches' Marriage to the Devil: A 'True Emblem of all Worldly Grandeur'
  • 3 The Chronotope of the Asylum: A Subversive Literary Space
  • 4 Violating a Maternal Body
  • 3 Scottish Masculinities and the British Empire
  • 1 More Than Just Highlanders
  • 2 British Masculinities
  • 3 Demystifying the Highland Warrior
  • 4 Wat o' the Cleuch: A Voracious Scottish Borderer Thief
  • 4 Women's Sexuality and the Scottish Kirk
  • 1 The Authority of the Scottish Kirk
  • 2 Child Murder and 'The Stool of Repentance'
  • 3 When Discourses Clash: Motherhood and Child Murder
  • 4 Mador of the Moor and the Fairies' Abduction of Unchristened Children
  • 5 'Maria's Tale' and the Evils of Female Servants' Seduction
  • 6 Bell Calvert and the Tragic World of 'Women of Ill Fame'
  • 5 Unconventional Heroines
  • 1 Introduction: 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
  • 1 Networking with the United States
  • 2 The 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.