Stepping Westward
Writing the Highland Tour c. 1720-1830
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:10th Mar '20
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Stepping Westward is the first book dedicated to the literature of the Scottish Highland tour of 1720-1830, a major cultural phenomenon that attracted writers and artists like Pennant, Johnson and Boswell, William and Dorothy Wordsworth, Coleridge, Scott, Hogg, Keats, Daniell, and Turner, as well as numerous less celebrated travellers and tourists. Addressing more than a century's worth of literary and visual representations of the Highlands, the book casts new light on how the tour developed a modern literature of place, acting as a catalyst for thinking about improvement, landscape, and the shaping of British, Scottish, and Gaelic identities. It pays attention to the relationship between travellers and the native Gaels, whose world was plunged into crisis by rapid and forced social change. At the book's core lie the best-selling tours of Pennant and Dr Johnson, associated with attempts to 'improve' the intractable Gaidhealtachd in the wake of Culloden. Alongside the Ossian craze and Gilpin's picturesque, their books stimulated a wave of 'home tours' from the 1770s through the romantic period, including writing by women like Sarah Murray and Dorothy Wordsworth. The incidence of published Highland Tours (many lavishly illustrated), peaked around 1800, but as the genre reached exhaustion, the 'romantic Highlands' were reinvented in Scott's poems and novels, coinciding with steam boats and mass tourism, but also rack-renting, sheep clearance, and emigration.
Leask's book thoroughly documents travelers' accounts of the Scottish Highlands back to the era of the Jacobite rebellions and traces their aesthetic legacy through the Romantic era. * Alexander Dick, European Romantic Review *
This rich book, the latest by Leask (Univ. of Glasgow, Scotland) devoted to the study of how Scotland has fared during its difficult modern relationship with England, focuses on the way non-Highland natives (most of them non-Scottish to boot) viewed and wrote about Scotland's northwestern-most region in the 18th and early 19th centuries... Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty. * W. Franklin, University of Connecticut, CHOICE *
...an interesting and insightful book which contributes new perspectives to a well-studied topic. In doing so, it covers a substantial range of sources, including many captivating illustrations, which help transport the reader's imagination to the landscape under discussion. As debates about the Highlands' relationship with tourism, and the region's continued perception in some quarters as a wilderness, are particularly pertinent in a time of restricted travel, this book provides a valuable historical and literary perspective. * Alastair Noble, Eighteenth-Century Scotland *
The 110-year period covered here allows for a wide range of literary perceptions of the Highlands... * Sandy Thomson, History Scotland Magazine *
ISBN: 9780198850021
Dimensions: 237mm x 161mm x 25mm
Weight: 752g
354 pages