Whether male or female, loyalist or radical, urban or rural, literati or autodidacts, Scottish Lowland poets in the age of Burns adamantly refuse to imagine a single British nation. Instead, they pose the question of “Scotland” as a revolutionary category, always subject to creative destruction and reformation.
Whether male or female, loyalist or radical, urban or rural, literati or autodidacts, Scottish Lowland poets in the age of Burns adamantly refuse to imagine a single British nation. Instead, they pose the question of “Scotland” as a revolutionary category, always subject to creative destruction and reformation.
Introduction Lowland Scottish Poetry in the “Age of Burns” 1 Burns’s Ayrshire “Bardies”: John Lapraik and David Sillar 2 Burns and the Women “Peasant Poets,” Janet Little and Isobel Pagan 3 Alexander Wilson and the Price of Radicalism 4 Lady Nairne, Burns’s Jacobite Other 5 “In the Shadow of Burns”: Robert Tannahill 6 Burns and the Jacobins, James Kennedy and Alexander Geddes Conclusion Acknowledgments Bibliography Index
Introduction Lowland Scottish Poetry in the “Age of Burns” 1 Burns’s Ayrshire “Bardies”: John Lapraik and David Sillar 2 Burns and the Women “Peasant Poets,” Janet Little and Isobel Pagan 3 Alexander Wilson and the Price of Radicalism 4 Lady Nairne, Burns’s Jacobite Other 5 “In the Shadow of Burns”: Robert Tannahill 6 Burns and the Jacobins, James Kennedy and Alexander Geddes Conclusion Acknowledgments Bibliography Index
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