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Douglas Gifford

    Douglas Gifford è stata una voce di spicco nella letteratura scozzese, ricercando e scrivendo ampiamente sulle sue ricche tradizioni. Il suo lavoro accademico ha approfondito il nucleo della narrativa scozzese, esplorando i suoi temi unici e i suoi stili narrativi. Le intuizioni critiche di Gifford hanno offerto ai lettori una comprensione più profonda degli autori e delle opere che hanno plasmato questo distintivo panorama letterario. La sua dedizione al campo ha illuminato il potere duraturo e il significato culturale della narrazione scozzese.

    Krigare, gudar & andar från de central- och sydamerikanska indianernas mytologi
    James Hogg
    Neil M. Gunn and Lewis Grassic Gibbon
    • Neil M. Gunn and Lewis Grassic Gibbon

      • 154pagine
      • 6 ore di lettura

      This full-length introductory study, first published in 1983, compares and contrasts these two writers. After setting Gunn and Gibbon in the context of the Scottish Renaissance - arguably, says Douglas Gifford, one of the richest periods of all Scottish Literature - it goes on to give an overview of each writer's work as a whole. This leads to detailed examination of their two most widely known works, Gunn's The Silver Darlings and Gibbon's A Scots Quair. The author shows how these two outstanding examples of the novelists' art, while providing plentiful examples of the qualities and similarities, yet epitomise their essential differences - Gunn's positive hope and Gibbon's negative despair.

      Neil M. Gunn and Lewis Grassic Gibbon
    • James Hogg

      • 242pagine
      • 9 ore di lettura

      James Hogg, known as "the Ettrick Shepherd," was a self-taught poet and author whose work reflected Border life and love. Initially viewed as a lesser successor to Robert Burns, his reputation began to shift with the 1824 release of The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner. This groundbreaking work redefined his legacy, showcasing his literary depth and complexity, while his friendships with figures like Walter Scott and his portrayal in Blackwood's Magazine added to his colorful persona as a rustic storyteller.

      James Hogg