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Narrating Scotland - The Imagination of Robert Louis Stevenson (Hardcover)
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Narrating Scotland - The Imagination of Robert Louis Stevenson (Hardcover)
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Beloved for generations as one of Robert Louis Stevenson's most
thrilling adventure novels, Kidnapped tells the story of David
Balfour, a shrewd and orphaned Lowlander, and Alan Breck Stewart,
the brave and flamboyant Jacobite rebel. Together with its less
familiar sequel, David Balfour, Kidnapped constitutes what many
scholars consider to be Stevenson's greatest achievement in
fiction. In this reinterpretation, Barry Menikoff questions the
traditional understanding of these twin novels as mere adventure
stories. He suggests instead that Stevenson wrote the volumes with
a broader and more searching purpose in mind. Although Stevenson
chose to cloak himself in the guise of an entertainer with no aim
beyond relating amusing and romantic tales from the past, Menikoff
reveals that the writer was a serious student of Scottish history
and culture. His true project was nothing less than the
reconstitution of his country's history in the period just after
the collapse of the Jacobite rebellion. Menikoff contends that in
Kidnapped and David Balfour Stevenson imaginatively reconstructed
that culture, in part for the sake of his nation, and for its
posterity. Narrating Scotland traces the Scottish writer's weaving
together of source material from memoirs, letters, histories, and
records of trials. Menikoff uncovers the documentary basis for
reading Kidnapped and David Balfour as political allegories and
reveals the skill with which Stevenson offered a narrative that
British colonizers could enjoy without being offended by its
underlying condemnation. Menikoff shows that Stevenson's
experiments in fiction, which would anticipate such works as Truman
Capote's In Cold Blood, successfully inscribed his country's loss
of indigenous culture upon an epic narrative that for more than a
century has masqueraded as a common adventure story.
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