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Walter Scott and Fame

Authors and Readers in the Romantic Age

Robert Mayer author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:9th Mar '17

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Walter Scott and Fame cover

Walter Scott and Fame is a study of correspondences between Scott and socially and culturally diverse readers of his work in the English-speaking world in the early nineteenth century. Examining authorship, reading, and fame, the book is based on extensive archival research, especially in the collection of letters to Scott in the National Library of Scotland. Robert Mayer demonstrates that in Scott's literary correspondence constructions of authorship, reading strategies, and versions of fame are posited, even theorized. Scott's reader-correspondents invest him with power but they also attempt to tap into or appropriate some of his authority. Scott's version of authorship sets him apart from important contemporaries like Wordsworth and Byron, who adhered, at least as Scott viewed the matter, to a rarefied conception of the writer as someone possessed of extraordinary power. The idea of the author put in place by Scott in dialogue with his readers establishes him as a powerful figure who is nevertheless subject to the will of his audience. Scott's literary correspondence also demonstrates that the reader can be a very powerful figure and that we should regard reading not just as the reception of texts but also as the apprehension of an author-function. Thus, Scott's correspondence makes it clear that the relationship between authors and readers is a dynamic, often fraught, connection, which needs to be understood in terms of the new culture of celebrity that emerged during Scott's working life. Along with Byron, the study shows, Scott was at the centre of this transformation.

Mayer's archival labour at the National Library of Scotland uncovers much interesting material and his study gives a strong sense of how protean a figure Scott was. ... This study deserves praise for its detailed readings of Scott's correspondence - for distinguishing, for example, between the warmer rhetoric of Scott's interactions with Scottish female poets and the formality of his discussions with English male poets. * Will Bowers, Times Literary Supplement *
this is an interesting and valuable monograph * Ian Dennis, ECF journal *
... in its conscientious archival research it offers an interesting new approach to Scott's reception in his lifetime. * Tom Mole, Modern Philology *

ISBN: 9780198794820

Dimensions: 241mm x 160mm x 21mm

Weight: 488g

236 pages