Description

Book Synopsis
New edition of a collection of songs and ballads from sixteenth-century Scotland, shedding important new light on the English and Scottish Reformation. The Gude and Godlie Ballatis is a collection of religious lyrics from the early years of the Scottish Reformation. It was a highly popular, if controversial, volume, was often reprinted, and is considered one of the most important literary works of vernacular Scots from the period. It contains translations of a number of Psalms, but most of the contents consist of shorter songs and ballads, many of which have been adapted from a secular to a spiritual use. The previous edition of the collection dates from 1897. The new edition not only revises the information given there, but presents the text of the earliest print (1565), which was unknown to the previous editor. The textual development of the collection through the various printings is studied, and is related to the changing historical, political, literary, cultural and theological contexts of Reformation Scotland. The editor addresses questions of authorship, transmission, source material, and the use and significance of these lyrics. Drawing on recent work in book history and English psalmody, as well as a deep knowledge of Older Scots lyric, he demonstrates the close connections between the collection and Continental hymnody, as well as interactions with English and Scots lyric, both sacred and profane. Alasdair A. MacDonald is Professor Emeritus of English Language and Literatureof the Middle Ages, University of Groningen.

Trade Review
The GGB was an important and enjoyable publication. So is this compendious new edition of that `compendious buke'. * JOURNAL OF THE EDINBURGH BIBLIOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY *
Will be much welcomed by scholars of the Scottish Reformation in particular. * INNES REVIEW *

Table of Contents
Introduction General Witnesses (printed) Witnesses (manuscript) Supposed witnesses Changes in contents Printing history Sources of texts The Wedderburns Textual transfers The archaeology of the collection The GGB and literature Cultural significance The value of 1565 GGB Previous editions Text criticism Early fortunes of the GGB: some hypotheses The language of the GGB Conclusion Treatment of Text Texts Commentary Appendix: The Lamentatioun of a Sinner Indices Glossary Bibliography

The Gude and Godlie Ballatis

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    A Hardback by Alasdair A. MacDonald

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      Publisher: Scottish Text Society
      Publication Date: 17/09/2015
      ISBN13: 9781897976418, 978-1897976418
      ISBN10: 1897976410

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      New edition of a collection of songs and ballads from sixteenth-century Scotland, shedding important new light on the English and Scottish Reformation. The Gude and Godlie Ballatis is a collection of religious lyrics from the early years of the Scottish Reformation. It was a highly popular, if controversial, volume, was often reprinted, and is considered one of the most important literary works of vernacular Scots from the period. It contains translations of a number of Psalms, but most of the contents consist of shorter songs and ballads, many of which have been adapted from a secular to a spiritual use. The previous edition of the collection dates from 1897. The new edition not only revises the information given there, but presents the text of the earliest print (1565), which was unknown to the previous editor. The textual development of the collection through the various printings is studied, and is related to the changing historical, political, literary, cultural and theological contexts of Reformation Scotland. The editor addresses questions of authorship, transmission, source material, and the use and significance of these lyrics. Drawing on recent work in book history and English psalmody, as well as a deep knowledge of Older Scots lyric, he demonstrates the close connections between the collection and Continental hymnody, as well as interactions with English and Scots lyric, both sacred and profane. Alasdair A. MacDonald is Professor Emeritus of English Language and Literatureof the Middle Ages, University of Groningen.

      Trade Review
      The GGB was an important and enjoyable publication. So is this compendious new edition of that `compendious buke'. * JOURNAL OF THE EDINBURGH BIBLIOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY *
      Will be much welcomed by scholars of the Scottish Reformation in particular. * INNES REVIEW *

      Table of Contents
      Introduction General Witnesses (printed) Witnesses (manuscript) Supposed witnesses Changes in contents Printing history Sources of texts The Wedderburns Textual transfers The archaeology of the collection The GGB and literature Cultural significance The value of 1565 GGB Previous editions Text criticism Early fortunes of the GGB: some hypotheses The language of the GGB Conclusion Treatment of Text Texts Commentary Appendix: The Lamentatioun of a Sinner Indices Glossary Bibliography

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