Emblems of Scotland in Alasdair Gray’s Fiction

Bibliographic Details
Title: Emblems of Scotland in Alasdair Gray’s Fiction
Authors: Ekaterina A. Martynenko
Source: Izvestiâ Ûžnogo Federalʹnogo Universiteta: Filologičeskie Nauki, Vol 25, Iss 3, Pp 102-113 (2021)
Publisher Information: Sourthern Federal University, 2021.
Publication Year: 2021
Collection: LCC:Philology. Linguistics
Subject Terms: scotland, nationalism, national identity, female nation figures, scottish literature, alasdair gray, scottishness, Philology. Linguistics, P1-1091
More Details: Alasdair Gray is one of the most influential post-war Scottish writer along with Muriel Spark, Robin Jenkins, and James Kelman. He is wellknown not only as a contemporary novelist, intellectual, and esthete but also as a political activist and a Scottish independence supporter. Although his novels are written exclusively in English, they are characterized with a strong national flavor and are inspired by the ideas of the eminent Scottish scientists, philosophers, and community leaders. The article dwells on the analysis of Scottish national emblem in Alasdair Gray’s fiction. This emblem manifests itself through female nation figures, which were first used in Scottish nationalist discourse by Hugh MacDiarmid and Lewis Grassic Gibbon during the period of Scottish Literary Renaissance. One of the most recurrent themes in Alasdair Gray’s fiction are female suffering and entrapment, which serve as political allegories of the national inferiority complex («Scottish cringe») and subordinate position within the United Kingdom. Thus, the writer strives to include Scotland into the post-colonial framework. In order to re-imagine Scottish nation figure Alasdair Gray addresses both the literary tradition and the latest feminist ideas of his time. Unlike other contemporary Scottish writers who tend to present this figure as a passive victim of political injustice, Alasdair Gray intentionally makes her initiative and active non-victim. She is also constructed as a female monster, which alludes to discrepancy between country’s rich history and its «young» parliament.
Document Type: article
File Description: electronic resource
Language: English
Russian
ISSN: 1995-0640
2312-1343
Relation: https://philol-journal.sfedu.ru/index.php/sfuphilol/article/view/1646; https://doaj.org/toc/1995-0640; https://doaj.org/toc/2312-1343
DOI: 10.18522/1995-0640-2021-3-102-113
Access URL: https://doaj.org/article/281700a994e94071a23c31b11e4c751f
Accession Number: edsdoj.281700a994e94071a23c31b11e4c751f
Database: Directory of Open Access Journals
More Details
ISSN:19950640
23121343
DOI:10.18522/1995-0640-2021-3-102-113
Published in:Izvestiâ Ûžnogo Federalʹnogo Universiteta: Filologičeskie Nauki
Language:English
Russian