<span>Emblems in the visual arts use motifs which have meanings, and in Emblems in Scotland Michael Bath, leading authority on Renaissance emblem books, shows how such symbolic motifs address major historical issues of Anglo-Scottish relations, the Reformation of the Church and the Union of the Crow
Alasdair Gray: The Fiction of Communion (Scroll 4) (Scottish Cultural Review of Language and Literature)
β Scribed by Gavin Miller
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 145
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Alasdair Grayβs writing, and in particular his great novel Lanark: A Life in Four Books (1981), is often read as a paradigm of postmodern practice. This study challenges that view by presenting an analysis that is at once more conventional and more strongly radical. By reading Gray in his cultural and intellectual context, and by placing him within the tradition of a Scottish history of ideas that has been largely neglected in contemporary critical writing, Gavin Miller re-opens contact between this highly individualistic artist and those Scottish and European philosophers and psychologists who helped shape his literary vision of personal and national identity. Scottish social anthropology and psychiatry (including the work of W. Robertson Smith, J.G. Frazer and R.D. Laing) can be seen as formative influences on Grayβs anti-essentialist vision of Scotland as a mosaic of communities, and of our social need for recognition, acknowledgement and the common life. Contents: Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter One: Lanark, The White Goddess, and βspiritual communionβ Chapter Two: The divided self β Alasdair Gray and R.D. Laing Chapter Three: Reading and time Conclusion: How βpost-β is Gray? Bibliography, Index
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