This book tracks the rise of modern cultural regionalism across the
turn of the nineteenth century. Attending specifically to literature
and literary culture, it examines how a particular region—southwest
Scotland—was reimagined between 1770 and 1830. Regionalisms were a
vital, emergent force in this period, in dialogue with the local, the
national, the transnational and the imperial. In the case of southwest
Scotland, the literary inscription of the region was generated in a
blossoming periodical press; by visitors like Dorothy Wordsworth and
John Keats; by resident icon Robert Burns; by homesick emigrants such
as Allan Cunningham; by adventurers, colonialists and pirates looking
back from within and beyond the formal limits of empire; by the
unprecedented success of Walter Scott; and by many others navigating
the opportunities presented by rapidly evolving economic,
environmental and infrastructural conditions. Regional
Romanticism illuminates a neglected aspect of anglophone literary
history, acknowledging regions and regionalism as a primary frame of
reference in late eighteenth and early nineteenth-century culture.
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Literature and Southwest Scotland, c.1770–1830
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783031613258
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Springer Nature
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter