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A Queer Book (Paperback): James Hogg A Queer Book (Paperback)
James Hogg; Edited by Gillian Hughes, Douglas S Mack, Peter Garside
R620 R561 Discovery Miles 5 610 Save R59 (10%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

'It will be a grand book for thae Englishers for they winna understand a word of it' Hogg's boast to William Blackwood Witty, humorous and comical as the title implies, the eccentric nature of many of the poems collected here nevertheless belies the often serious and moral issues contained within. Newly available in paperback, and including many of Hogg's better known longer pieces, the present volume is based on the first edition of A Queer Book to be published since 1832 - though the similarity between the two editions ends with the running order. While the text for the original edition was substantially reworked by the publisher to smooth out Hogg's use of Scots, this volume brings together manuscripts from all over the world to provide material as near to his final copy as possible. The result is a vibrant collection including many poems which have never been studied critically before. A thorough introduction to the best of Hogg's poetry.

James Hogg's the Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner - A Commentary with Readings (Standard format, CD):... James Hogg's the Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner - A Commentary with Readings (Standard format, CD)
James Hogg, Douglas Gifford, John Shedden
R390 Discovery Miles 3 900 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Professor Douglas Gifford, Emeritus Professor of Scottish Literature at the University of Glasgow, explores James Hogg's most famous work, The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner. This shocking tale of a minister's son who believes himself chosen by God to punish those he sees as evil-doers, and who has a mysterious guide in all his atrocities, has been labelled a Gothic story - yet it has more in common with traditional Scottish folk-tales, but with the alternative possibility of an astonishingly modern reading, in which there are no devils and no wonders, only the delusions of a diseased mind. Professor Gifford guides the listener through the turns and twists of the novel, accompanied by atmospheric readings of selections from the text by John Shedden. Both psychological and supernatural elements are explored, along with the background to Hogg and his works. This double-disk audio CD makes an excellent tool for classroom use or for home study.

Anecdotes of Scott (Paperback, New Ed): James Hogg Anecdotes of Scott (Paperback, New Ed)
James Hogg; Edited by Jill Rubenstein
R606 Discovery Miles 6 060 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

After Scott's death in 1832 James Hogg wrote an affectionate but frank account of their long friendship. Scott's son-in-law and official biographer, John Gibson Lockhart, declared himself to be filled with 'utter disgust and loathing' at the 'beastly and abominable things' he found it to contain.

This edition includes both the original version, written as a contribution to a Scott biography planned by a young London friend of Hogg's, and a revised version created subsequently for an American market. Those with an interest in Romantic biography and autobiography will be particularly fascinated by these lively, readable, idiosyncratic and disconcerting texts.

A wealth of information is provided in the paperback edition of this volume, which also includes a useful Hogg chronology and reading list.

From reviews of the hardback edition

'What makes this in the end fascinating and compelling reading is that Hogg does not present us with a balanced and distanced account of someone else's life but rather opens up to us a particularly interesting relationship between two people, a relationship which attracts our attention because, like real-life relationships, it is not without its ups and downs, its tensions and disturbances... Jill Rubenstein's excellent introduction to these texts provides us, amongst other things, with a balanced and perceptive account of the two writers' complex relationship "the tribute of one remarkable man to another, both flawed and both admirable, living in a remarkable time."' Scottish Studies Review

'The editorial task has been undertaken with a peculiar degree of commitment and with a determination that a long-postponed duty towards James Hogg will nowbe undertaken with a thoroughness which should stand the test of time.' Studies in Scottish Literature

The Three Perils of Woman (Paperback, New Ed): James Hogg The Three Perils of Woman (Paperback, New Ed)
James Hogg; Edited by Antony Hasler, Douglas S Mack, David Groves
R626 Discovery Miles 6 260 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

First published in 1823, Hogg's powerful novel combines two stories that hauntingly echo each other, one set in Edinburgh and the Scottish Borders in the early 1820s, and the other set in the Highlands in 1746, the time of Culloden and its devastating aftermath. The Three Perils of Woman subversively challenges many of the attitudes and assumptions of the established elite of Hogg's day, for example by refusing to gloss over what it calls 'the disgrace of the British annals', the atrocities committed by the Duke of Cumberland's victorious army in the Highlands after Culloden. Likewise, in its story of the 1820s Hogg's novel questions prevailing social attitudes to prostitution and other matters. The Three Perils of Woman had an interested but shocked and hostile reception on its first publication, and this controversial text was omitted from all the nineteenth-century collected editions of Hogg's works. It remained out of print from the 1820s until its republication in 1995 in the new Stirling / South Carolina edition of Hogg published by Edinburgh University Press, on which the present edition is based.Since 1995 The Three Perils of Woman has come to be seen as a book of outstanding interest and importance. 'Commentators once dismissed Perils of Woman as a bad book because it trampled on the flowerbeds of early-nineteenth-century decorum; they now acclaim it a masterpiece for the very same reason, reading subversive craft in the place of oafishness.' Ian Duncan, Studies in Hogg and his World 'Both stories [of The Three Perils of Woman] are generically diverse, self-consciously impure. Hogg described them as 'domestic tales', apparently soliciting a female readership whose delicacy he then assaults with speculations about promiscuity and prostitution, and with prayers so chattily informal that reviewers found them blasphemous. Both stories modulate suddenly from comedy to tragedy, though one - but which?- struggles through to what may be a happy ending. [...] What matters about The Three Perils of Woman is not the conclusions it has to offer about the issues it raises, but the fact that these are addressed with such painful urgency.They have become urgent once again, and will continue to be so; and if the book provides an especially useful way of thinking about them, it's because it offers an 'unflinching' account of a violent national past while acknowledging the temptation, the impulse, even the need, to flinch. ' John Barrell, London Review of Books.

The Queen's Wake - A Legendary Tale (Paperback, Revised): James Hogg The Queen's Wake - A Legendary Tale (Paperback, Revised)
James Hogg; Edited by Douglas S Mack; Contributions by Meiko O'Halloran, Janette Currie
R650 Discovery Miles 6 500 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The Queen's Wake is one of the landmarks of British Romantic poetry. It focuses on the return of Mary, Queen of Scots to Scotland in 1561 to take personal rule of her kingdom after her years in France. In the poem poets and bards hold a poetic competition (a 'wake') in Holyrood Palace to welcome the Queen. A key concern of the poem is the state of Scotland in 1561 - a crucial period in Scottish history. The Queen's Wake looks back to the pre-1560 world of Catholic Scotland and explores the tensions between that old world and an emerging modernity. On publication The Queen's Wake was an unexpected popular success, placing Hogg for a while alongside Byron and Scott as one of the most admired British poets of that time. Over the next six years Hogg was encouraged to make substantial revisions, to make the poem even more attractive and saleable. It thus exists in significantly different authorial versions, each reflecting Hogg's circumstances at the time. To best serve the modern reader, this edition presents both the first and fifth edition of the poem.

Tales of the Wars of Montrose (Paperback, New Ed): James Hogg Tales of the Wars of Montrose (Paperback, New Ed)
James Hogg; Edited by Gillian Hughes
R613 Discovery Miles 6 130 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In this collection of short stories Hogg focuses on the Scottish civil war of 1644-45, in which the Marquis of Montrose led his royalist forces in a series of stunning victories against the odds before his final defeat at Philiphaugh. Each of Hogg's five tales centres on one of the five major battles of Montrose's brilliant but ultimately futile campaign. Each tale is utterly different from the others in genre and tone, but taken together they build up a composite picture of what it was like to experience the 'anarchy and confusion' of the time at first hand. The importance of Tales of the Wars of Montrose was long obscured by the fact that the publisher of the first edition seriously mangled Hogg's text, not least by including an unrelated sixth tale in order to bulk out the collection to the commercially-expected norm of three volumes. Gillian Hughes has restored Hogg's coherent five-tale collection, and by returning to Hogg's manuscripts in preparing her edition she has made possible the first appearance in print of an uncensored text of this lively and innovative collection.

The Mountain Bard (Hardcover, New ed): James Hogg The Mountain Bard (Hardcover, New ed)
James Hogg; Edited by Suzanne Gilbert
R2,661 Discovery Miles 26 610 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Hogg grew up in rural Ettrick Forest in a notable family of tradition-bearers, and in his first major poetry collection "The Mountain Bard" of 1807 he claims his rightful position at the centre of that culture. Whereas Scott collected the "Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border" Hogg was the sole author of "The Mountain Bard," He learned to negotiate the erudite print culture of Edinburgh with the literary ballad, sometimes helped and sometimes hindered by his powerful friend, shifting the shape of his earlier manuscript and periodical poems accordingly. Then in 1821, when he was an established literary man, he published a revised edition in keeping with his new professional status as Author of "The Queen's Wake," The present edition prints together, for the first time, the surviving pre-1807 versions of poems included in "The Mountain Bard," the full 1807 collection, and the complete 1821 version. The Introduction (besides giving a full history of this complex, changing work) places it firmly within the eighteenth-century antiquarian projects of ballad-collecting and the intellectual currents of Romanticism, in particular the literary vogue for the ballad shown in works such as "Lyrical Ballads" (1798) by Wordsworth and Coleridge.

Visit the James Hogg Society website to find out more about Hogg.

Available in Paperback:

The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner

The Shepherd's Calendar

Tales of the Wars of Montrose

The Three Perils of Woman

Winter Evening Tales

Anecdotes of Scott

The Queen's Wake

Altrive Tales

Also Available in Hardback:

A Queer Book

The Shepherd's Calendar

The Three Perils of Woman

Tales of the Wars of Montrose

LaySermons

Queen Hynde

Anecdotes of Scott

The Spy

The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner

The Jacobite Relics of Scotland (First Series)

The Jacobite Relics of Scotland (Second Series)

Winter Evening Tales

The Queen's Wake

Altrive Tales

The Collected Letters of James Hogg, Volume 1, 1800-1819

Altrive Tales - Featuring a Memoir of the Author's Life (Paperback, New Ed): James Hogg Altrive Tales - Featuring a Memoir of the Author's Life (Paperback, New Ed)
James Hogg; Edited by Gillian Hughes
R624 Discovery Miles 6 240 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Review of the hardback edition:

"This is a fascinating volume, full of surprises, challenges and confirmations Gillian Hughes's editorial activities are exemplary: the textual decisions and apparatus inspire confidence and assent, and the genesis of the "Tales" is pieced together from manuscript evidence in an introduction which is a serious piece of scholarly detective work in its own right [S]he offers finely-observed, stimulating exegesis which will encourage further readings, and the explanatory notes offer some wonderfully suggestive analogies. Altogether, the volume is a revelation."& madash; "Studies in Hogg and his World"

"I like to write about myself: in fact, there are few things I like better'" so confesses Hogg with pawky self-mocking humour in "Altrive Tales,"

This collection opens with Hogg's own story of how a ragged servant-lad remade himself as a respected professional writer, the associate of Byron, Scott, Southey, Wordsworth and Galt. Hogg's frank and humorous "Memoir of the Author's Life" is widely recognised as a classic of Romantic autobiography and an important record of early nineteenth-century Scottish culture.

The themes of the "Memoir" continue in the tales that follow. "The Adventures of Captain John Lochy" is a fast-paced historical fiction, the autobiography of a social outcast adrift in Scotland, Russia, the Netherlands, and Sweden. "The Pongos" (an early version of the Tarzan story) takes a look at Scottish involvement in the British empire in a comic parody of Enlightenment notions about the nature of man and of society. "Marion's Jock" is a virtuoso exercise in Scots and in Hogg's ability to communicate the peasant lifestyle of his nativeScottish Borders.

This new edition, thoughtfully introduced, extensively annotated and featuring a reading list and Hogg chronology, presents "Altrive Tales" as a major achievement by one of Scotland's finest storytellers.

Collected Letters of James Hogg, Volume 3, 1832-1835 (Hardcover, New): James Hogg Collected Letters of James Hogg, Volume 3, 1832-1835 (Hardcover, New)
James Hogg; Edited by Gillian Hughes; Series edited by Douglas S Mack, Gillian Hughes
R2,644 Discovery Miles 26 440 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The third and final volume of the first collected edition of Hogg's letters reveals his versatility in old age. In 1832 he visits London for the first time and becomes the literary lion of the season. As communications improve in the early 1830s, he explores the possibility of writing for American periodicals, and deals (mostly) gracefully with the various claims made on his time as a celebrity author. The loss of old friends is compensated for by a circle of young admirers and prot?g?s, and Hogg turns an acutely observant eye on an age of cheap periodicals and of political reform.

A full editorial apparatus includes biographical notes on his chief correspondents and an overview of this phase of his life. The volume also contains an index to all three volumes of this complete edition of Hogg's letters.

The Queen's Wake - A Legendary Poem (Hardcover, New): James Hogg The Queen's Wake - A Legendary Poem (Hardcover, New)
James Hogg; Edited by Douglas S Mack; Contributions by Meiko O'Halloran, Janette Currie
R2,658 Discovery Miles 26 580 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The Queen's Wake is one of the landmarks of British Romantic poetry. It focuses on the return of Mary, Queen of Scots to Scotland in 1561 to take personal rule of her kingdom after her years in France. In the poem poets and bards hold a poetic competition (a 'wake') in Holyrood Palace to welcome the Queen home. In the descriptions of the songs and the people who sing them various Scottish poets of Hogg's own period can be recognised, giving the reader a sense of the condition of poetry in Hogg's Scotland. Another key concern of the poem is the state of Scotland in 1561 - a crucial period in Scottish history, coming a year after the legislation was passed that brought in the Scottish Reformation. The Queen's Wake looks back to the pre-1560 world of Catholic Scotland and explores the tensions between that old world and an emerging modernity. When The Queen's Wake was published in 1813 it proved an unexpected popular success, placing Hogg for a while alongside Byron and Scott as one of the most admired British poets of that time. Over the next six years Hogg was encouraged by major players in the Edinburgh book trade to make substantial revisions, to make the poem even more attractive and saleable. The fifth edition (1819) is an enhanced and carefully polished version from the now established and respected poet. It is markedly different from the edgy, powerful and unsettling first version of The Queen's Wake, which was the work of an impecunious and marginalised outsider. Thus the poem exists in significantly different authorial versions, each reflecting Hogg's circumstances at the time. In recent years a consensus has emerged that in cases of this kind the modern reader is best served by having access to editions of both versions. The Stirling/South Carolina Research Edition of The Queen's Wake therefore presents both the first and fifth edition of the poem. Key Features: * The publication of one of the landmarks of British Romantic poetry * At time of publication the poem's success placed Hogg alongside Burns and Scott as one of the leading writers of the period * Presents both the first and fifth editions of the poem to allow the reader to compare the two * A careful editorial introduction places the poem in its historical context

Altrive Tales - Collected Among the Peasantry of Scotland and from Foreign Adventurers (Hardcover, New): James Hogg Altrive Tales - Collected Among the Peasantry of Scotland and from Foreign Adventurers (Hardcover, New)
James Hogg; Edited by Gillian Hughes
R2,633 Discovery Miles 26 330 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Altrive Tales was carefully prepared by Hogg in 1832 as the opening volume in a planned twelve-volume collected prose fiction series, intended as the culmination of his career as a storyteller. It opens with his own story of how a ragged servant-lad remade himself as a respected professional writer, the associate of Byron, Scott, Southey, Wordsworth and Galt. Hogg's frank and humorous 'Memoir of the Author's Life' is widely recognised as a classic of Romantic autobiography and an important record of early nineteenth-century Scottish culture. Hogg's sharp eye for the latest publishing phenomena and pawky self-mocking humour is evident in his awareness of Altrive Tales as a contribution to the monthly-volume classic fiction series of the early 1830s following Sir Walter Scott's magnum opus edition of the Waverley Novels. Frankly pleading guilty to the egotism of presenting his own output to the world as a literary classic Hogg engagingly confesses, 'I like to write about myself: in fact, there are few things which I like better [...]'. The themes of the 'Memoir' continue in the tales that follow.' The Adventures of Captain John Lochy' is a fast-paced historical fiction, the autobiography of a social outcast adrift in Scotland, Russia, the Netherlands, and Sweden. 'The Pongos' (an early version of the Tarzan story) takes a look at Scottish involvement in the British empire in a comic parody of Enlightenment notions about the nature of man and of society. 'Marion's Jock' is a virtuoso exercise in Scots and in Hogg's ability to communicate the peasant lifestyle of his native Scottish Borders. This new edition, thoughtfully introduced and extensively annotated, presents Altrive Tales as a major achievement by one of Scotland's finest storytellers.

Winter Evening Tales (Hardcover): James Hogg Winter Evening Tales (Hardcover)
James Hogg; Edited by Ian Duncan
R2,669 Discovery Miles 26 690 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Winter Evening Tales (1820; second edition 1821) was James Hogg's most successful work of prose fiction in his lifetime. Exhibiting the most complex genesis of any of Hogg's works, it is the outstanding example of a 'national' genre pioneered by him -- the miscellaneous collection of popular and traditional narratives. Hogg's experimental medley of novellas, tales, poems and sketches posed a lively alternative to the dominant form of the historical novel established by Walter Scott. The collection includes terse masterpieces of mystery and the uncanny, virtuoso improvisations on folktale themes, and -- the highlights of the edition -- two brilliant autobiographical novellas, The Renowned Adventures of Basil Lee and Love Adventures of Mr George Cochrane. Reprinted in incomplete and unreliable texts in Victorian editions of Hogg's works, Winter Evening Tales fell into almost total obscurity after the author's death. The Stirling/ South Carolina Edition of the Collected Works of James Hogg is delighted to republish this key work in Hogg's career in its entirety for the first time since the early nineteenth century.

The Jacobite Relics of Scotland - Volume 1 (Hardcover, New Ed): James Hogg The Jacobite Relics of Scotland - Volume 1 (Hardcover, New Ed)
James Hogg; Edited by Murray Pittock
R3,985 Discovery Miles 39 850 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

James Hogg's Jacobite Relics - originally commissioned by the Highland Society of London in 1817 - is an important addition to The Collected Works of James Hogg. It created a canon for the Jacobite song which had an enormous influence on subsequent collections, and was of great importance in defining the relationship between the Scottish song tradition and its Romantic editors and collectors. From the first publication of the Relics in 1819 the majority of scholars have argued about how many of them were authored or at least substantially altered by Hogg. Professor Murray Pittock has conducted extensive research in this area since 1987, and has identified many previously neglected or unknown sources from which Hogg would have worked as he developed his collection. He has identified contemporary 17th- and 18th-century sources for the majority of the songs in the edition. This has implications not only for Hogg's integrity as a writer, but for our understanding of the history of the Scottish song as a whole. The introduction to volume one includes the crucial issue of Hogg's relationship to the Jacobite song tradition, and the place of the Relics within Hogg's career and personal context, facilitating further interpretations of Hogg's range of creative strategies. Considerable annotation accurately communicates the context of the songs and Hogg's relationship to the textuality of Jacobite culture. The introduction to volume two deals with the genesis of the text and Hogg's relationship with the Highland Society. This volume will be available from November 2002.

Contributions to "Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine" - Volume 1, 1817-1828 (Hardcover, New): James Hogg Contributions to "Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine" - Volume 1, 1817-1828 (Hardcover, New)
James Hogg; Edited by Thomas C. Richardson
R2,666 Discovery Miles 26 660 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Although portrayed as the 'boozing buffoon' of Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Hogg (both as the celebrated Ettrick Shepherd and anonymously) was a key contributor of songs, narrative poems, tales, and reviews to the liveliest of all early nineteenth-century periodicals. The present volume includes several items hitherto published only in Blackwood's, and ranges from the infamous 'Chaldee Manuscript' to newly-identified items such as a Scottish commemoration of the coronation of George IV. The volume also includes works Hogg intended for Blackwood's but which are now published for the first time. Hogg's work for his favourite periodical is provided in this volume in full cultural context, including detailed annotation and a convenient and complete editorial apparatus. Also included is music for several of the Shepherd's songs.

The Bush Aboon Traquair and the Royal Jubilee (Hardcover, New): James Hogg The Bush Aboon Traquair and the Royal Jubilee (Hardcover, New)
James Hogg; Edited by Douglas S Mack
R2,621 Discovery Miles 26 210 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

"The Bush aboon Traquair," like Allan Ramsay's "The Gentle Shepherd," is a pastoral drama with songs, and in this play Hogg celebrates the life of the people of his native community in Ettrick Forest. At times earthy and at times hilarious, The Bush focuses on rural courtship, and it derives part of its energy from its presentation of a contrast between the old ways and an emerging (but not always admirable) modernity. Here, as elsewhere in Hogg's writings, the shepherds and ewe-milkers of Ettrick Forest operate in a pastoral world that is noticeably realistic and convincing. They pursue their love adventures as ardently as if they were inhabitants of the more literary pastoral world of the Forest of Arden, but as they do so they also have to cope with some very unpoetical and very troublesome sheep. It appears that The Bush was first drafted around 1813, but the first publication of Hogg's play came when a bowdlerised version was included in his posthumous Tales and Sketches (1837). Douglas Mack's edition includes the first-ever publication of the unbowdlerised version of "The Bush aboon Traquair,"

Written on the occasion of George IV's famous royal visit to Edinburgh in 1822, The Royal Jubilee is another pastoral drama with songs. In this 'Scottish Mask', Hogg brings a group of representative Scottish spirits to a 'romantic dell' on Arthur's Seat. The spirits (including an Ossianic Highlander who has suffered dispossession, and the ghost of an old Covenanter) give expression to past Scottish grievances against royalty, while indicating their hope that the King's visit will bring renewal and a fresh start. This potentially ambiguous expression of loyalty is further complicated byvarious Jacobite references and echoes as the spirits prepare to welcome a Hanoverian king, returning to the ancient kingdom of his Stuart ancestors.

The Forest Minstrel (Hardcover, New): James Hogg The Forest Minstrel (Hardcover, New)
James Hogg; Edited by Peter Garside, Richard D Jackson; Contributions by Peter Horsfall
R2,647 Discovery Miles 26 470 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Edited by Peter Garside and Richard D. Jackson, with musical notations prepared by Peter Horsfall
Originally published in 1810, The Forest Minstrel represents the first full collection of songs by Hogg. The items contained include some of his first compositions as a shepherd in Ettrick, while others originate from early contact with the literary culture of Edinburgh. This edition for the first time supplies musical settings for the majority of items, whereas in 1810 Hogg only nominated tunes by title. These settings are based on extensive research in relevant pre-1810 Scottish music books. As a result, the modern reader is given access to the tunes which originally formed an integral part of the songs. An Introduction describes Hogg's development as a song-writer and the musical context in 1810; while full annotation is provided on both the texts of the songs and the related tunes.
The volume also includes a CD containing audio recordings of the seventy-two tunes which are provided by means of the notations.

Contributions to Annuals and Gift Books (Hardcover): James Hogg Contributions to Annuals and Gift Books (Hardcover)
James Hogg; Edited by Janette Currie, Gillian Hughes
R2,646 Discovery Miles 26 460 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

In 1822 Rudolph Ackermann's Forget Me Not [...] for 1823 established a fashion for handsomely produced and copiously illustrated annual anthologies of short literary works. Books of this kind were designed as Christmas and New Year's presents, and in the 1820s and 1830s they became a significant publishing phenomenon. Like other well-known writers of the time (including Wordsworth, Scott, and Letitia Elizabeth Landon), Hogg was a contributor to the annuals, and Contributions to Annuals and Gift-Books brings together all the Hogg texts that were either written for, or first published in, annuals and gift-books. 'Invocation to the Queen of the Fairies' in the Literary Souvenir for 1825 was Hogg's first known contribution to an annual, and thereafter writing for the annuals became 'a kind of business' for him during the economic slump of the late 1820s. Contributions to Annuals and Gift-Books contains some of Hogg's finest short stories (for example 'The Cameronian Preacher's Tale' and 'Scottish Haymakers'), as well as some of his best-known poems (for example 'A Boy's Song' and 'The Sky Lark'). This volume highlights a coherent part of Hogg's total literary output, and in doing so provides new insights into an area of nineteenth-century publishing history that is attracting increasing interest and attention. Hogg was a professional writer with an acute awareness of the shifting trends of the literary marketplace during the 1820s and 1830s, when annuals were at their peak of popularity. However, his literary objectives did not always match the needs of the annuals, and as a result some of his contributions were returned as unsuitable for a family-oriented audience. Hogg's sometimes complex negotiations with the editors and publishers of the annuals are meticulously documented in Contributions to Annuals and Gift-Books. In this context, the volume (for example) reprints both Hogg's manuscript version of 'What is Sin?', and the version actually published in Ackermann's Juvenile Forget Me Not. The engravings for which Hogg wrote are included in the present volume.

Mador of the Moor (Hardcover): James Hogg Mador of the Moor (Hardcover)
James Hogg; Edited by James E Barcus
R2,613 Discovery Miles 26 130 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

With an Essay on Hogg's Literary Friendships by Janette Currie and an Appendix on the Popular Context by Suzanne Gilbert

Scottish popular tradition includes a group of stories about a King who has adventures - amorous and otherwise - as he wanders in disguise among his people. Many of these stories focus on James V and in Walter Scott's long narrative poem "The Lady of the Lake" (1810) the King encounters a mysterious lady while he is wandering alone and unrecognised in the Highlands. At first sight Scott's heroine seems to be a simple country girl, but she turns out to be a daughter of the great aristocratic house of Douglas, living for the time being in a rural exile.

Scott's romantic and aristocratic version of the old 'wandering King' stories was hugely popular in its day, but Hogg subverts and questions this tale in "Mador of the Moor" (1816). The name 'Mador' suggests 'made o'er', 'made over', and "Mador of the Moor" is in effect a makeover of "The Lady of the Lake," Hogg's poem, like Scott's, tells how a deer-hunt in the Highlands leads a disguised King of Scots into a love-adventure with a young woman. However Hogg's heroine, Ila Moore, is not a chaste aristocrat but a girl of low social standing who is made pregnant by the wandering King. Ila's inherent resourcefulness and strength of character suggest that a peasant girl pregnant out of wedlock can be a heroine fully worthy of respect, and "Mador" (rejected as shocking and ridiculous by its original readership), now re-emerges as a flowing and immensely readable narrative that eloquently challenges the deeply-ingrained class and gender prejudices of Hogg's society.

The Jacobite Relics of Scotland, v. 2 (Hardcover, New): James Hogg The Jacobite Relics of Scotland, v. 2 (Hardcover, New)
James Hogg; Edited by Murray Pittock
R3,588 Discovery Miles 35 880 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

James Hogg's "Jacobite Relics"--originally commissioned by the Highland Society of London in 1817--is an important addition to "The Collected Works of James Hogg." It created a canon for the Jacobite song which had an enormous influence on subsequent collections, and was of great importance in defining the relationship between the Scottish song tradition and its Romantic editors and collectors. From the first publication of the Relics in 1819, there has been speculation about how many of them were authored or at least substantially altered by Hogg. Murray Pittock has conducted extensive research in this area since 1987, and has identified several previously unknown sources from which Hogg would have worked as he developed his collection. The introduction to volume one includes the crucial issue of Hogg's relationship to the Jacobite song tradition, and the place of the Relics within Hogg's career and personal context, facilitating further interpretations of Hogg's range of creative strategies. Both volumes one and two provide considerable annotation to accurately communicate the context of the songs and Hogg's relationship to the textuality of Jacobite culture. Volume one also includes a bibliography and glossary. The introduction to volume two deals with the genesis of the text and Hogg's relationship with the Highland Society.

Contributions to Scottish Periodicals (Hardcover): James Hogg Contributions to Scottish Periodicals (Hardcover)
James Hogg; Edited by Graham Tulloch, Judy King
R2,877 R2,414 Discovery Miles 24 140 Save R463 (16%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days

This volume contains the original versions of James Hogg's contributions to Scottish periodicals, including newspapers, literary journals and specialist agricultural journals, which were an important outlet for Hogg's work throughout his literary life and his contributions cover many of his favourite themes and styles including the supernatural, rural life, current events, books, human relationships and Scottish history appearing in short stories, songs, poems, newspaper reports, letters to the editor, travel writing and articles on Scottish life, culture and country. The volume provides examples of the range and diversity of themes, genres and styles found in Hogg's work from the time when he first came to live in Edinburgh to try and establish himself as an author in 1810 till the time of his death.

Scottish Stories (Hardcover): Walter Scott, James Hogg, Robert Louis Stevenson, Margaret Oliphant, John Buchan, Arthur Conan... Scottish Stories (Hardcover)
Walter Scott, James Hogg, Robert Louis Stevenson, Margaret Oliphant, John Buchan, …
R330 R264 Discovery Miles 2 640 Save R66 (20%) Ships in 11 - 16 working days

Scottish Stories is a treasury of great writing from a richly literary land, where the short story has flourished for over two centuries. Here are chilling supernatural stories from Robert Louis Stevenson, Eric Linklater and Dorothy K. Haynes; side-splittingly funny stories from Alasdair Gray and Irvine Welsh; a stylish offering from urban realist William McIlvanney. Iain Crichton Smith evokes the Gaelic-speaking highlands, George Mackay-Brown the Orkney islands, Andrew O'Hagan working-class Glasgow; while Leila Aboulela, originally from Sudan, ponders the relations between colonizers and colonized from her home in Aberdeen. Though there is no one 'Scottishness' that binds the authors together, writes editor Gerard Carruthers, each has a Scottish footprint or accent. And perhaps more importantly, all are masters of their form.

The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner (Paperback): James Hogg The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner (Paperback)
James Hogg
R266 R217 Discovery Miles 2 170 Save R49 (18%) Ships in 9 - 15 working days
Collected Letters of James Hogg, Volume 2, 1820-1831 (Hardcover, New): James Hogg Collected Letters of James Hogg, Volume 2, 1820-1831 (Hardcover, New)
James Hogg; Edited by (associates) Gillian Hughes, Douglas S Mack, Robert MacLachlan, Elaine Petrie
R2,658 Discovery Miles 26 580 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

Hogg was a superb letter-writer, and this is the second volume of the first collected edition of his letters (to be completed in three volumes). Many of the letters have never been published before, or published only in part. They vividly reflect Hogg's varied social experience and shed new light on his own writings and those of his contemporaries. Among his famous correspondents were writers such as Scott, Byron, and Southey, antiquarians such as Robert Surtees, politicians such as Sir Robert Peel, and editors and publishers such as John Murray, William Blackwood, and Robert Chambers. This volume begins with Hogg's preparations for marriage and ends with his taking ship for London for his first and only visit to the literary metropolis. During the intervening years he publishes some of his greatest works. Fighting debt, promoting tourism, maintaining his extensive literary and social circle in Scotland and in London, and writing prolifically, the Hogg of these letters is a Scottish cultural powerhouse.

A full editorial apparatus includes biographical notes on his chief correspondents and an overview of this phase of his life.

Key Features:

* The first ever edition of Hogg's letters to be published

* Includes many letters never previously published

* Features Hogg's correspondence with figures such as Sir Walter Scott, Lord Byron and Sir Robert Peel

Contracts, Cases and Theory of Contractual Obligation (Hardcover): James Hogg, Carter & Bishop, Daniel Barnhizer Contracts, Cases and Theory of Contractual Obligation (Hardcover)
James Hogg, Carter & Bishop, Daniel Barnhizer
R6,213 Discovery Miles 62 130 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

This new book is a hybrid - in addition to well selected cases, it contains substantial scholarly textual material introducing each topic or case. The student is given insights into both historical development and applicable theory. The approach is "show the ball" so as to enable the student to get more deeply into the challenging material. Each case is followed by extensive notes and questions designed to extend student thinking and reasoning. A very detailed Teachers Manual will accompany this book is available, containing briefs of each case, lists of interesting discussion and focus issues, and answers to every question in the notes.

The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner (Paperback): James Hogg The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner (Paperback)
James Hogg
R241 Discovery Miles 2 410 Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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