Search results for ""author thomas c. richardson""
Edinburgh University Press The History of Matthew Wald: John Gibson Lockhart
A scholarly edition of Lockhart's most intricate and sophisticated contribution to the Scottish historical novel Critically-edited text with full scholarly apparatus Comprehensive Introduction that addresses the composition of the novel, the novel's literary and historical contexts, and the novel's critical reception Extensive Explanatory Notes that identify quotations within the novel, the novel's literary, historical, political, cultural, and geographical references, and other key expressions Provides a comprehensive glossary of Scots words, as well as other single words that might not be familiar to the reader Textual notes addressing Lockhart's revisions based on the extant manuscript proof, as well as other publications within Lockhart's lifetime The History of Matthew Wald (1824) is John Gibson Lockhart's fourth and final novel and perhaps his most focused, stylistically successful fiction. The title character tells his own story, which is set in the context of, and carefully interwoven with, the larger historical, social, and political events and circumstances of Scotland in the 18th and early 19th centuries. Matthew Wald exemplifies Lockhart's idea that the novel should portray the 'human mind under the influence of not one, but many of its passions ambition love revenge remorse' and should reflect the historical and social truth of the age. This scholarly edition includes an Introduction that discusses the literary and historical contexts of the narrative and the novel's early reception and textual history. Detailed Explanatory Notes complement the Introduction to provide the modern reader with the resources to re-evaluate Lockhart's place in the history of the Scottish novel and Romantic fiction.
£81.00
Edinburgh University Press Contributions to "Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine": Volume 1, 1817-1828
Although portrayed as the 'boozing buffoon' of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Hogg (both as the celebrated Ettrick Shepherd and anonymously) was a key contributor of songs, narrative poems, tales, and reviews to the liveliest of all early nineteenth-century periodicals. The present volume includes several items hitherto published only in Blackwood's, and ranges from the infamous 'Chaldee Manuscript' to newly-identified items such as a Scottish commemoration of the coronation of George IV. The volume also includes works Hogg intended for Blackwood's but which are now published for the first time. Hogg's work for his favourite periodical is provided in this volume in full cultural context, including detailed annotation and a convenient and complete editorial apparatus. Also included is music for several of the Shepherd's songs.
£90.00
Edinburgh University Press Some Passages in the Life of MR Adam Blair, Minister of the Gospel at Cross-Meikle
£90.00