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         Scottish Literature:     more books (100)
  1. Scottish literature, character & influence by G. Gregory Smith, 1972
  2. Kailyard and Scottish Literature. (Scottish Cultural Review of Language and Literature) by Andrew Nash, 2007-03-20
  3. The Protean Scot: The Crisis of Identity in Eighteenth Century Scottish Literature by Kenneth Simpson, 1989-03
  4. Studies in Scottish Literature (XXVII)
  5. Studies in Scottish Literature.Volume XVI. by Ross Roy, 1981
  6. A Wheen O' Blethers: The Changing Face of Scottish Literature by David Gray, 2000-08-17
  7. The Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature, Volume One: From Columba to the Union (until 1707)
  8. Whaur's Yer Wullie Shakespeare Noo: Scotland's Millennium Souvenir (Scottish Literature) by Allan Morrison, 1999-03
  9. Odd Alliances: Studies on Scottish Literature in European Contexts by Neil McMillan, Kirsten Stirling, 1999
  10. The History of Scottish Literature: Origins to 1660 by R. D. S. Jack, 1988-03
  11. The Puritan-Provincial Vision: Scottish and American Literature in the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge Studies in American Literature and Culture) by Susan Manning, 1990-05-25
  12. Specimens of Scottish Literature, 1325 - 1835. With Introduction, Notes and Glossary. by W M Metcalfe, 1913
  13. Bards and Makars: Scottish Language and Literature: Medieval and Renaissance
  14. Selected Essays on Scottish Language and Literature: A Festschrift in Honor of Allan H. Maclaine by Allan H. MacLaine, 1992-10

101. Celtic Studies
Offers the study of Celtic languages plus the literature and history from about 800 BC to the present. St FX is the only university in North America offering three years of scottish Gaelic.
http://xel.stfx.ca/academic/celtic-studies/
Celtic Studies Webmail
CELTIC STUDIES
Celtic Studies is a broad field that includes the languages, literatures and histories of the Celtic peoples. Thus it ranges in scope from the Continental Celts of ancient Gaul to the modern Celtic languages of Scottish, Irish and Manx Gaelic and Welsh, Cornish and Breton . The study of one or more of these languages is an important step towards understanding where many of our most important cultural, linguistic, and social institutions originate. The discipline of Celtic Studies contributes to a broader pursuit of Western civilization: archaeology, art, monasticism, languages, and literature. StFX is one of the few universities in Canada offering the study of Celtic languages and the literature and history of the Celts from about 800 BC to the present. We possess one of the finest collections of Scottish Gaelic works and recorded Scottish Gaelic Folklore in Canada, supplemented by substantial holdings in the other areas of Celtic studies. Major initiatives in the department include the Gaelic Language and Folklore Project and the Chair of Gaelic Studies.

102. Fine Scottish Products By Exclusively Aberdeenshire
scottish products from the North East of Scotland arts and crafts, food and drink, literature and music, Highland wear and accessories.
http://www.aberdeenshire.com/exclusively
Exclusively Aberdeenshire is an exciting initiative to showcase and promote products from the North East of Scotland.
Food and Drink, Arts and Crafts, and Textiles are just some of the products featured under the Exclusively Aberdeenshire banner. The range will be available from Selected Retail Outlets throughout Aberdeenshire that will be promoted on this web site.
This site is currently under development so please come back and visit. Please visit Exclusively Aberdeenshire - News for further information or
Aberdeenshire Business Network
- for details of businesses in Aberdeenshire

103. Larry Hutchison Books: Home Page
scottish books and documents of the 16th21st centuries, emphasis on history, topography, genealogy, military, music and literature.
http://www.larryhutchisonbooks.com/
LARRY HUTCHISON 27 Albany Street
Dunfermline, Fife
Scotland, KY12 0QZ
Tel: +44(0)1383 725566
Fax: +44(0)1383 620394 Member of the Provincial Booksellers Fairs Association Email: info@larryhutchisonbooks.com How to Buy Visit my stand at the following Book Fair (click here for full list):
Book Catalogue
s Also see: www.scotland-bookshop.co.uk © Larry Hutchison, 2001-2004

104. Arthur Conan Doyle - The History Of Spiritualism Vol I Page 88
Excerpts from The History of Spiritualism Vol I.
http://www.classic-literature.co.uk/scottish-authors/arthur-conan-doyle/the-hist
Arthur Conan Doyle
The History of Spiritualism Vol I
Page 88 * SPIRITUAL MAGAZINE, 1868, p. 321. I desire to convey to those of my friends in America who introduced them to me, the assurance of my conviction that the Brothers' mission to Europe has been of great service to Spiritualism; that their public conduct as mediums-in which relation I alone know them-has been steady and unexceptionable. He adds that he knows no form of mediumship better adapted for a large audience than theirs. After this visit to London the Davenports returned home to America. The brothers visited Australia in 1876, and on August 24 gave their first public seance in Melbourne. William died in Sydney in July, 1877. Throughout their career the Davenport Brothers excited the deep envy and malice of the conjuring fraternity. Maskelyne, with amazing effrontery, pretended to have exposed them in England. His claims in this direction have been well answered by Dr. George Sexton, a former editor of the SPIRITUAL MAGAZINE, who described in public, in the presence of Mr. Maskelyne, how his tricks were done, and comparing them with the results achieved by the Davenports, said: "The two bear about as much resemblance to each other as the productions of the poet Close to the sublime and glorious dramas of the immortal bard of Avon."* Still the conjurers made more noise in public than the Spiritualists, and with the Press to support them they made the general public believe that the Davenport Brothers had been exposed.

105. Medieval Scotland
A collection of articles by Sharon L. Krossa, including such topics as handfasting, kilts, William Wallace, and Robert Bruce. Also a bibliography and links for scottish medieval names, clothing, history, and literature.
http://www.medievalscotland.org/
Medieval Scotland Last updated 29 Aug 2005 This is a collection of articles and resources aimed at anyone interested in Scotland between A.D. Some of the articles discuss not only what was done in Scotland in the Middle Ages but also how modern people might re-create aspects of medieval Scottish culture. While this may be of direct interest mainly to novelists and historical re-creators (such as those involved with battle re-enactment societies, renaissance fairs, or the SCA), this way of looking at things can also help clarify and illustrate actual medieval practice for anyone. Contact information Key to Date Colours: (New or Recently Updated) (Unchanged)
History
  • Scottish Medieval Bibliography A bibliography of web and paper published books and articles on various aspects of medieval Scotland, including general history, Gaelic Scotland, The War of Independence (1296-1328), languages, towns, and handfasting and marriage. The Literature and Published Primary Sources sections in particlar have a number of links to texts available online. (27 Mar 2004)
Names

106. Rob Roy On The Web
A comprehensive guide and directory to resources on the scottish hero Robert Roy MacGregor (16711734) and his image in literature and film.
http://www.isidore-of-seville.com/robroy/
About this site History Movie, Rob Roy (1995) Sir Walter Scott's ... Scotland Links
About this site
Welcome to Rob Roy on the Web , a guide and directory to resources on the Scottish hero Robert "Roy" MacGregor (1671-1734) and his image in literature and film. Guide to this site: In the History section you will find biographies of RobRoy and essays on his time. In the Movie section you will find reviews, analyses and fan sites relating to the 1995 movie starring Liam Neeson, Jessica Lange and Tim Roth. In the Sir Walter Scott section you will find etexts of and essays relating to his 1817 historical novel. Site additions, corrections and comments should be addressed to editor@isidore-of-seville.com Add yourself to the Isidore of Seville Rob Roy list. You'll receive an update whenever major new features are added to the site. If you like I can keep you up to date on my other European history sites (currently just one on Dueling ). I'll never send you more than one email per month, I promise. Enter email Keep me up-to-date on your other sites.

107. SLAINTE
SLAINTE is the website of SLIC, the scottish Library and Information However, Macpherson s influence on European literature (eg on Goethe and the German
http://www.slainte.org.uk/scotauth/macphdsw.htm
James Macpherson
James Macpherson was born in Ruthven, Badenoch on 27th October 1736 and attended both Aberdeen and Edinburgh Universities before returning to his native district as a teacher. By 1758 he had moved to Edinburgh where he worked as a tutor and tried to make his name as a poet. Celticism was then in vogue through the "discovery" of Welsh bardic poetry. The excitement generated by a Gaelic ballad published in the Scots magazine in 1756 may have spurred Macpherson to similar activity. In 1760 he published Fragments of ancient poetry , which gave glimpses of a rugged, ancient land inhabited by venerable warriors brooding on past glories. Son of the noble Fingal, Ossian, Prince of men! What tears run down the cheeks of age? What shades thy mighty soul? Memory, son of Alpin, memory wounds the aged. Of former times are my thoughts; my thoughts are of the noble Fingal. These "translations" gave Macpherson a success his original compositions had not achieved. Having claimed that the "fragments" represented larger works still obtainable, he was encouraged to collect more. Before long Macpherson published his main works

108. VoS - Voice Of The Shuttle
Contemporary Postcolonial Postimperial literature in English (extensive, scottish Writers on the Internet ( biographical and bibliographical
http://vos.ucsb.edu/browse.asp?id=2748

109. Scottish Studies Database
Dr, Meg, Bateman, Sabhal Mòr Ostaig, scottish Gaelic literature and song, , - Research interests the scottish diaspora, immigrant literature,
http://projects.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/asls/search.php?research=Gaelic

110. Project MUSE
That these academics largely ignored scottish vernacular literature and insisted on Anglocentric standards of linguistic propriety leads Crawford to view
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/eighteenth-century_life/v029/29.2mcilvanney.html
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This article is available through Project MUSE, an electronic journals collection made available to subscribing libraries NOTE: Please do NOT contact Project MUSE for a login and password. See How Do I Get This Article? for more information.
Login: Password: Your browser must have cookies turned on McIlvanney, Liam "Hugh Blair, Robert Burns, and the Invention of Scottish Literature"
Eighteenth-Century Life - Volume 29, Number 2, Spring 2005, pp. 25-46
Duke University Press

Excerpt
Eighteenth-Century Life

[Access article in PDF]
Liam McIlvanney On 4 May 1787, the day before leaving Edinburgh after his eventful first winter in the Scottish capital, Robert Burns wrote to the Reverend Hugh Blair, retired Professor of Rhetoric and Belles Lettres at Edinburgh University, thanking him for "that kindness, that patronage, that friendship" that the older man had shown him. The letter is not fulsome. It is fairly short; it has none of the vivid, Shandean banter that enlivens Burns's letters to more congenial correspondents; and it is one of a number of letters Burns sent off that Friday as he put his affairs in order. It is the perfunctory performance of a man discharging an obligation. And yet, this was an obligation that Burns felt keenly enough to act upon. Of all the people he encountered during his five-month stay in the capital, Blair was one of a handful whose assistance warranted formal acknowledgement.

111. Scottish Writers
2004 Chair of judges for scottish Book Of The Year. scottish Writers . The site closed in 2000, but many pages remain online in case they might be of
http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~crumey/scot.html
Scottish Writers
Scottish Writers

112. Www.scotlit.com/

http://www.scotlit.com/

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