BOOKS - Four Galt Novels: Annals of the Parish, The Ayrshire Legatees, The Provost, T...
US $9.56
629164
629164
Four Galt Novels: Annals of the Parish, The Ayrshire Legatees, The Provost, The Entail by John Galt (2015-09-17)
Author: John Galt
Year: January 1, 1766
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 3.6 MB
Language: English
Year: January 1, 1766
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 3.6 MB
Language: English
Galt s tragi comic novel of conflicted desires presented in historical legal and local contextsThe first scholarly edition to focus on the complex legal nuances that pervade the novel including Scottish entails court procedure and the figure of the lawyerAn introduction that explores and notes offering easy access to the growing research on John Galt his narrative techniques and cultural interventions of one of the first generational novels to sweep over 100 years of social changeA critical apparatus glossing the Scottish dialect language and customs the historical references with an emphasis on their economic implications and the legal terrain that was an urgent concern of the novel s original readersMemorable for characters eccentric yet socially and economically representative and for scenes alternately comic and tragic John Galt s 1823 novel The Entail is a compelling story of greed anxiety and tradition against a background of social upheaval In addition to making this remarkable novel available in a scholarly edition with annotations suitable both for the general reader and for research the editors provide an introduction that makes its complex legal issues of property marriage law trial procedures accessible in the context of Scottish Romanticism and modernisation Situating Galt s aesthetic choices in dialogue with the Romantic era Scottish novel the volume discusses the text Galt s letters early periodical reviews and recent scholarship Through annotations that clarify Scots language and dialect as well as legal parlance the editors highlight the novel s comic collisions of language and personalities and the attention to social transformation that Galt painstakingly although sometimes obliquely details