Contemporary Scottish Women Writers
Alison Lumsden editor Aileen Christianson editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This collection of essays, by both new and established critics, provides stimulating readings of many of the Scottish women writers working in Scots and English today. A variety of critical approaches ensures diversity in these essays on fiction, poetry and drama. While in the growing field of Scottish women's writing it is impossible to be all encompassing, these essays cover a wide range from the most established, Muriel Spark, to newer writers such as Laura Hird. It includes new readings of Janice Galloway and A. L. Kennedy and examines the work of poets such as Carol Ann Duffy and Kate Clanchy, dramatists such as Sharman Macdonald and Sue Glover as well as writers, including Jackie Kay, who cross genre boundaries. Exploring the interface between gender and nation as well as the excitement and energy generated by much of this writing, these essays fill a gap in critical response to contemporary Scottish women writers. Contributors to this volume include: Carol Anderson, Barbara Bell, Helen Boden, Sarah M. Dunnigan, Ksenija Horvat, Margery Palmer McCulloch, Glenda Norquay, Lynne Stark, Susan Triesman. Features *The first book to present a range of critical responses to contemporary Scottish women writers *Contemporary - both in terms of the subject matter and the critical/theoretical approaches *Looks at a range of genres (fiction, poetry, drama)
The contributors write about their subjects with passion, inventiveness and clarity Comprehensive ! perceptive ! a weel producit buik fur the recreational reader as weel as the thesis-driven student o literature. -- Lallans The contributors write about their subjects with passion, inventiveness and clarity Comprehensive ! perceptive ! a weel producit buik fur the recreational reader as weel as the thesis-driven student o literature.
ISBN: 9780748609796
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 316g
192 pages