The Oxford Handbook of Robert Burns explores the extensive writing of and culture surrounding Scotland's national 'bard', Robert Burns (1759-96).
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- 1: Gerard Carruthers: Introduction. Robert Burns: Poet and Texts in Life and Afterlife
- Part I - Texts
- 2: Patrick Scott: The Imprint of His Origin: Robert Burns, John Wilson, and the Print Culture of Late Eighteenth-Century Ayrshire
- 3: Nigel Leask: 'My Heart's in the Highlands': Poetry, Politics, and Patronage in Robert Burns's Highland Tour
- 4: Murray Pittock: The Scots Musical Museum
- 5: Kirsteen McCue: 'For the honour of Caledonia': Burns's Songs for George Thomson
- 6: Jeremy J. Smith: The Pragmatics of Punctuation in the Letters of Robert Burns
- 7: John Burnett: Robert Burns and the Devil: 'Halloween'
- 8: Gerard Lee McKeever: 'I, Rob, am here': Becoming and Belonging in the Verse Epistles
- 9: Ronnie Young: The Kirk Satires and Kirk Politics
- 10: Pauline Mackay: Burns and Bawdry
- 11: Robert P. Irvine: 'Tam o' Shanter' - Storytelling and Antiquarianism
- 12: Gerard Carruthers and Kevin Thomas Gallagher: The Politics of Robert Burns from the 1780s to the 1790s
- 13: Moira Hansen: Writing to and about Women
- 14: Sandro Jung: Robert Burns and Book Illustration
- Part II - Cultural and Intellectual Contexts
- 15: Fiona Stafford: Burns and the Natural World
- 16: Colin Kidd: Anti-Calvinism and the Ayrshire Enlightenment
- 17: Corey E. Andrews: Robert Burns, Club Society, and Convivial Sociability
- Part III - The Burns Industry
- 18: David Hopes: Birth of a Collection: Burns Monument Trust and the formation of Scotland's first literary museum (1814-1900)
- 19: Johnny Rodger: The Architectural Monument to Robert Burns in the New Age of Identity Politics and Nationalism
- 20: Leith Davis: Sights of Memory: Robert Burns and Romantic-era Book Illustration
- 21: Murdo Macdonald: Robert Burns and the Visual Arts: Portraiture, National Landscapes, and the Context of Monuments
- 22: Caroline McCracken-Flesher: Robert Burns and the Cultural Politics of Food
- 23: Gerard Carruthers and George Smith: Bard Behaviour: Imitating, Mistaking, and Faking Burns
- 24: Brean Hammond: Afterburn(s): Scholarly and Fictional Receptions
- Part IV - Burns's British Afterlives
- 25: Alex Deans: 'At the Grave of Burns': Robert Burns and British Romanticism after 1800
- 26: Jon Mee: Why the English had to invent Robert Burns
- 27: Ronald Black: Parallel Universes: Burns and Gaelic
- 28: Kirstie Blair: 'No new note?': Burns and the Victorian Working-Class Poet
- 29: Catriona M. M. Macdonald and Christopher A. Whatley: 'We'll ne'er forget the people': Burns and Politics, 1796-1945
- Part V - International Writer
- 30: Jennifer Orr: Robert Burns and Ireland
- 31: Clark McGinn: Dear Guest and Ghost: Celebrating Robert Burns convivially and globally since 1801
- 32: Thomas Keith: Burns Among the American Abolitionists
- 33: Liam McIlvanney: The View from the Octagon: Robert Burns in New Zealand
- 34: David Goldie: Robert Burns and Twentieth-Century War
- 35: Josephine Dougal: Iconic Burns: A Shape Shifting 'Sign' of the Times
- 36: John Ritchie: Burns on Screen: A Critical History of Cinematic Representations of the Life of the Bard
- 37: Craig Lamont: Burns in The Digital Age
- 38: Matthew Wickman: Robert Burns and the Inhuman
- Part VI - Burns Biography
- 39: Rhona Brown: Burns Biography, 1786-1800
- 40: Carol Baraniuk and Gerard Carruthers: Burns Biography, 1808-1939
- 41: Carol Baraniuk: Burns Biography, 1949-2019
- 42: Kevin Thomas Gallagher: Further Resources