The international companion to John Galt
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The international companion to John Galt
(International companions to Scottish literature)
Scottish Literature International, 2017
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 165-169) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
John Galt (1779-1839) was a contemporary of Sir Walter Scott and Jane Austen, and a friend and biographer of Lord Byron. Although a prolific writer, and much admired in his own lifetime, Galt has never achieved comparable levels of literary fame, and his works - poised between Enlightenment and Romanticism - are now often overlooked. Yet his reputation has been slowly growing, and he has attracted critical interest as both a political novelist and a chronicler of Scottish life. This INTERNATIONAL COMPANION builds on a steady stream of recent scholarship, and examines Galt's writings in the social, economic, and religious contexts of their time.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Series Editors' Preface
A Brief Biography of John Galt
Introduction (Gerard Carruthers and Colin Kidd) 1. John Galt's Ayrshire (Andrew O'Hagan) 2. Satire, Hypocrisy, and the Ayrshire-Renfrewshire Enlightenment (Colin Kidd) 3. Finding Galt in Glasgow (Craig Lamont) 4. Galt the Speculator: Sir Andrew Wylie, The Entail, and Lawrie Todd (Angela Esterhammer) 5. How John Galt Wrote North America (Ian McGhee) 6. Commemorating the Covenanters in Ringan Gilhaize (Alison Lumsden) 7. The Insider's Eye in the Age of Improvement, Urbanisation, and Revolution (Christopher A. Whatley) 8. Pioneering the Political Novel in English (Gordon Millar) 9. Reading for Something Other than the Plot in Galt's 'Tales of the West' (Anthony Jarrells) 10. Gender and the Short Story in the Twilight Years (Gerard Carruthers) Endnotes Further Reading Notes on Contributors Index
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