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Langage Cleir Illumynate
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Drawn from papers given at an international conference held in 1999, this collection of essays offers new perspectives on Scots poetry of the late Middle Ages and early modern period. It includes e...
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01 January 2007

Drawn from papers given at an international conference held in 1999, this collection of essays offers new perspectives on Scots poetry of the late Middle Ages and early modern period. It includes essays on major poets, such as John Barbour, Robert Henryson, David Lyndsay and William Drummond; it also considers less famous writers such as John Bellenden and John Stewart of Baldynneis. Across these tightly focused essays, two themes predominate: the first is the imagined relationship between writer and reader, revealing a consistent concern with interpretation in Older Scots writing; the second is the place of literary influence, whether that too is Scots or from beyond Scotland’s borders. This volume will be of interest to all academics and students with an interest in Older Scots writing; it will also have some appeal for scholars working in late medieval and early modern literature more generally.
Price: $87.00
Pages: 224
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: SCROLL: Scottish Cultural Review of Language and Literature
Publication Date:
01 January 2007
ISBN: 9789042023192
Format: Paperback
”This coherent, confident volume touches on many of the big ‘names’, the principal genres, the forms and issues, and on the broader traditions within which the works themselves need to be placed. Consequentely, the essays offer a great deal of genuinely useful instruction on older Scots culture, but they also convey the excitement, inclusiveness, multidisciplinary, and richness of current work in the field.” in: Scottish Literary Review, Vol. 2 No. 2, 2011