‘Tenshillingland’: Community and Commerce, Myth and Madness in the Modern Scottish Novel.


Autoria(s): Lyall, Scott
Contribuinte(s)

Lyall, Scott

Data(s)

2016

Resumo

While ‘community’ as a concept has come under increasing attack in a neoliberal era, it has remained in Scotland a mythic, though not unexamined, signifier of resistance to perceived threats to national identity. Community, central to the Scottish novel since the Kailyard, continues to be a prevalent theme in the many important novels of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries explored here. Yet, while often disturbingly oppressive in tenor, many of these representations of community actually attack the myth of Scottish communalism to critique, and often expose as forms of madness, the conventional values of social class, capitalism, patriarchy, and religion.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/10243/1/Community%20and%20Commerce%20Myth%20and%20Madness%20in%20the%20Modern%20Scottish%20Novel.pdf

Lyall, Scott (2016) ‘Tenshillingland’: Community and Commerce, Myth and Madness in the Modern Scottish Novel. In: Community in Modern Scottish Literature. Brill Rodopi, pp. 1-24. ISBN 9789004317444

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

Brill Rodopi

Relação

http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/10243/

Palavras-Chave #PN0080 Criticism #PR English literature
Tipo

Book Section

PeerReviewed