Of Chora and the Taming of the Political Uncanny: Sir Walter Scott’s The Highland Widow as a Nationalizing Tale
The argument and conclusions of this study do not contradict the positions that have been taken with regard to Scott’s Toryism and its endorsement of Britishization. The study, however, takes issue with critical approaches that sidestep the implicit connections of Scott’s pro-Britishization and his...
Main Author: | Zahra A Hussein Ali |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | Arabic |
Published: |
Sultan Qaboos University
2018-06-01
|
Series: | Journal of Arts and Social Sciences |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://journals.squ.edu.om/index.php/jass/article/view/2623 |
Similar Items
-
Remembering Professor Walter A. Scott
by: Stefan G. Sarafianos
Published: (2014-10-01) -
Blanco White and Walter Scott
by: Fernando DURÁN LÓPEZ
Published: (2011-01-01) -
Barnaby Rudge as A Historical Novel and Sir Walter Scott's influence
by: Alev Baysal
Published: (2004-12-01) -
“Hospitality to the Exile and Broken Bones to the Tyrant”: Early Modernity in Walter Scott’s Waverley
by: Gül Sinan
Published: (2018-07-01) -
Walled up alive: The Uncanny and Gender haunted spaces in Shirley Jackson’s Haunting of Hill House
by: Ayesha Ejaz Khan
Published: (2022-12-01)