ISBN13: | 9781802072068 |
ISBN10: | 1802072063 |
Kötéstípus: | Puhakötés |
Terjedelem: | 240 oldal |
Súly: | 666 g |
Nyelv: | angol |
700 |
The Scottish picaresque as environmental justice 2025
GBP 75.00
The picaresque novel has always generated widespread appeal due to the charisma and charm of its roguish main characters, who live by their wits on the margins of society. Spanish and English satires feature the perseverance and resilience of picaros who skirt and challenge the overreach of authoritarian regimes. Critics who focus on the picaresque reflect this social animus but rarely address how these authors perceive marginal societies, as not only vulnerable peoples but also environments.
What were the conditions that allowed the picaresque to flourish in Scotland? Spanning from 1748-1857, this study posits that England?s imaginative and physical re-engineering of Scotland prompts Scottish authors, and those of Scottish descent, to recognize not only the allyship between the picaro and local environments and climates, but also the power that stems from it. The book includes chapters on a diverse set of authors, including Tobias Smollett, Samuel Johnson, John Galt, Charlotte Lennox, Mungo Park, James Hogg, and Mary Seacole. They deploy the picaresque to foreground discrete and interconnected environments that are under duress because of English efforts to establish an imperial totality.
What Van Renen calls the ?Scottish picaresque? integrates the major characteristics of the genre with the picaro?s response to environmental precarity. Ultimately, the texts studied here model for readers how to eschew cartographic or imperial semiotics, and recognize physical features and places long forgotten or appropriated by the state for large-scale economic development.
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Introduction
Chapter 1 The Ecological picaro in Tobias Smollett's Roderick Random
i. Random in the London underworld
ii. Mrs. Sagely, Sussex, and the fulfillment of the picaresque
Chapter 2 "Her strange mockery": Balwhidder, the Gaffaws, and the survival of the Scottish picaresque
i. Balwhidder, bees, and butterflies
ii. Jenny and Meg Gffaw: burial and resurrection of the picaresque
Chapter 3 "Eyes fixed on the ground": the Scottish picaresque in Colonial America
i. Passage to America
ii. America and new literatures
iii. Euphemia, (male) passion, and (female) resistance
iv. America and the cold
Chapter 4 Emigration and ecocatastrophe in Johnson's Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland
i. Locating the denuded Highlands
ii. Exposing the picturesque
Chapter 5 The Picaresque and Scottish-African independence
i. Park's affective surveying
ii. Park and the picturesque
Chapter 6 "Like is an ill mark": Smollett, Park, and the perseverance of the Scottish picaresque in James Hogg's Confessions
i. Smollett and park revisited
ii. "The Shadow and the substance": the heroic picaro
iii. Robert and the end of the picaresque
Epilogue " Female Ulysses": The picaresque and reconfigurations of "home" in Mary Seacole's Wonderful adventures
i. Seacole and the picaresque across the Caribbean and London
ii. "Blue hills," "blue waters," and "blue sky"
Bibliography
Index