- Detalles de la revista
- Formato
- Revista
- eISSN
- 1841-964X
- Publicado por primera vez
- 01 Jan 2012
- Periodo de publicación
- 2 veces al año
- Idiomas
- Inglés
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Editor’s Note
- Acceso abierto
Scottish Literature: Representing the Nation in the Age of the Post-National
Páginas: 1 - 6
Resumen
Artikel
- Acceso abierto
“Daft naff Scottish things”: Stuff, Waste and Memory Objects in Jackie Kay’s Trumpet
Páginas: 7 - 28
Resumen
Guided by new materialist approaches to the memory of loss, this reading of Jackie Kay’s 1998 novel
Palabras clave
- objects of memory
- souvenirs
- objects of mourning
- thing-power
- thing theory
- thingness
- animacy
- stuff theory
- Black Scottishness
- prosopopoeia
- Acceso abierto
The Future as a Scenario of Hospitality in Ali Smith’s There But For The
Páginas: 29 - 47
Resumen
The purpose of this essay is to demonstrate how Ali Smith’s novel
Palabras clave
- futurity
- conditional hospitality
- unexpected event
- choratic space
- contingency
- thematization
- singularity
- Acceso abierto
“In came the self-evident and luminous little mess”: Ethical Life Writing in Muriel Spark’s Loitering with Intent i
Páginas: 48 - 67
Resumen
Starting from a brief examination of Muriel Spark’s position as a Scottish novelist within the framework of her anti-essentialist, anti-authoritative aesthetics, my essay will take a seemingly abrupt, but in fact consequential turn to investigate the complex antinomies involved in her fictional representation of the lives of others. Although at home and abroad she is hailed as Scotland’s most celebrated author of the twentieth century, Spark’s writerly practice consists of regularly dismantling grand narratives or fixed, stable identities, often clashing with more localized or prescriptive views on the social and national functions of narrative. My argument, however, is that it is the very unease of her “Scottishness” that acts as one of the foundations of her literary ethics, embodied in her acute awareness of the antinomies involved in textualizing the lives of others. Spark’s shrewdly metafictional
Palabras clave
- Scottish fiction
- Muriel Spark
- narrative ethics
- life writing
- alterity
- biography
- autobiography
- authorial responsibility
- Acceso abierto
Violence, Innocence and Redemption in Irvine Welsh’s Chemical Mythos
Páginas: 67 - 84
Resumen
Scottish author Irvine Welsh has crafted an internally cohesive cosmology, grounded in mapping a somewhat loosely defined “chemical generation” that helped spearhead a personal brand of anti-Thatcherite counterculture (with an especially heavy focus on the marginalized, disgruntled and boisterous youths of Edinburgh). Examining some of the writer’s most recent and lesser-known works, my essay will argue that a series of archaic mythical patterns, symbols and cosmological coordinates can be shown to guide a large number of the axioms that Welsh employs to refine his own vision of a modern, emergent mythos.
Palabras clave
- Irvine Welsh
- comparative mythology
- emergent mythology
- archaic cosmology
- altered states of consciousness
- ritual initiation
- chemical generation
- Acceso abierto
The Battle Within and the Battle Without: The Posthuman Worldview of Ken MacLeod’s The Corporation Wars Trilogy
Páginas: 85 - 104
Resumen
The present essay seeks to analyze Scottish science fiction writer Ken MacLeod’s
Palabras clave
- contemporary Scottish science fiction
- posthumanism
- simulation
- machinic awareness
- ideology
- political science fiction
- Acceso abierto
Modernism, Postmodernism and the Nature of the Times: A Conversation with Randall Stevenson
Páginas: 105 - 122
Resumen
The interview offers a comprehensive, paradigmatic overview of the experience of literary modes within the broad frameworks of modernity and postmodernity. It invites reflection and rethinking of epistemic change from a major literary historian and theorist whose work in the Anglo-American context has become synonymous with the examination of temporality, historicity, and poeticality in twentieth century experimentation with form. Revisiting central concepts and aesthetic categories in literary criticism and theory, Randall Stevenson contributes a highly contemporary, ground-breaking vision of the literary act against the backdrop of the new structures of knowledge pertaining to the digital age and the post-humanist crisis.
Palabras clave
- modernism
- postmodernism
- literature
- temporality
- epistemic
- paradigmatic
- historicity
- post-war sensibility
- humanities
- dissociation of sensibility
Postcards
Resumen
According to Giorgio Agamben, the Greek term for ‘habitual dwelling place,’ or ‘habit,’ is
Palabras clave
- Suburbia
- Dwelling
- Home
- Utopia
- Dystopia
- Memory
- History
- the Body
- Chiasmus
- Ruins
- Ephemeral
- the Allegorical
Reviews
- Acceso abierto
Scotland and Scottishness: From Tradition to Modernity
Páginas: 157 - 161
Resumen
- Acceso abierto
The Literary Politics of Scottish Devolution: Voice, Class, Nation
Páginas: 162 - 165
Resumen
- Acceso abierto
Unnatural Narratology: Extensions, Revisions, and Challenges
Páginas: 166 - 171
Resumen
- Acceso abierto
Contemporary Women’s Post-Apocalyptic Fiction
Páginas: 172 - 177
Resumen
- Acceso abierto
The Dictionary Wars: The American Fight over the English Language
Páginas: 178 - 180