Title: Waverley, Volume II
Author: Sir Walter Scott
Release Date: January, 2004 [EBook #4965] [Yes,
we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This
file was first posted on April ...
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INTRODUCTION—(1829)
The plan of this Edition leads me to insert in this
place some account of the incidents on which the Novel
of Waverley is founded. They have been already
given to ...
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Title: Waverley, Volume I
Author: Sir Walter Scott
Release Date: January, 2004 [EBook #4964] [Yes,
we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This
file was first posted on April 5...
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Title: Waverley
Or ’Tis Sixty Years Hence
Author: Sir Walter Scott
Release Date: January, 2004 [EBook #4966] [Yes,
we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This
file was f...
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Biography EssayWalter Scott was the most influential novelist in world literature. Relying on his capacious memory and drawing on medieval and Renaissance verse romance, his eighteenth-century forerun...
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The Scottish novelist and poet Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832) is the acknowledged master of the historical novel. He was one of the most influential authors of modern times.Walter Scott was born in Edin...
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In the following excerpt, Gordon evaluates Waverley as a historical/political novel, focusing on its Jacobite theme and Scott's presentation of character.
“… the contest between t...
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In the following essay, Orr examines Scott's representation of time, imagination, history, and memory in Waverley.
Beginning in Waverley, Scott the novelist sets himself “the task of tra...
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In the following essay, Lamont investigates thematic inconsistencies between the romantic and historical plots of Waverley, considering Scott's motive for intentionally relegating to the backgr...
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In the following essay, Hamilton assesses Scott's writing in Waverley as historicist, while illuminating Scott's ironic treatment of romanticism and his philosophical distance from revol...
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In the following essay, Makdisi explores the mythic geography of the Scottish Highlands in Waverley and the related temporal and spatial conflicts between England and this imagined Scotland. The criti...
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In the following essay, Schmidgen studies the theme of property in Waverley, particularly as it relates to the legitimatization of Scotland's absorption by Great Britain.
In Sir Walter Scott...
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In the following essay, Raleigh depicts Waverley as a realistic novel written in the satirical mode of the eighteenth century but also concerned with the progress of history and featuring a proto-mode...
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In the following essay, Hennelly analyzes Waverley as a romantic novel characterized by Scott's extensive use of myth, dialectic, and romance elements in the narrative.
Since Morse Peckham...
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In the following essay, Sroka argues that the theme of education is central to Waverley, especially as it pertains to the tension between reality and imagination in the novel.
Early in the third chapt...
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In the following essay, Ross discusses imagery of landscape and character in Waverley, concentrating on Scott's use of picturesque theory and conventions in structuring his novel.
‘From ...
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In the following essay, Valente probes Scott's conception of history in Waverley, emphasizing the symbolic and thematic dialectic of romance and history illustrated by opposing characters and g...
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In the following essay, Smith contends that Scott synthesized the modern historical novel in Waverley by grafting “dialectical rhetoric” and “anthropological historicism” t...
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In the following essay, Ferris observes that the publication of Waverley in 1814 prompted a critical reevaluation of the novel by associating the genre with seriousness, rationality, and the accurate ...
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In the following essay, Oberhelman reorients the debate concerning Scott's historicism in Waverley from a dialectic of history and romance to a thematic opposition of genealogy and teleological...
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When asked whether "Waverley" is an anti-Romantic novel, one must first fully understand the term "Romantic" and then discuss whether the characteristics of this expression are at all reflected within...
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