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Robert Burns - The Tinder Heart

Robert Burns - The Tinder Heart

SKU : SLS-BK1370
4,00£Prix

Title: Robert Burns - The Tinder Heart
Author: Hugh Douglas
Publisher: Allan Sutton Publishing Ltd., Stroud
Date: 1998

 

Softcover - 1st paperback Edition. Illustrated. 299pp

  • Synopsis

    The Author examines the Sex/love-life of Robert Burns showing that he was a man who was much less secure than his actions suggest, one for whom sex was an act of rebellion as well as love.  Burns called himself "an extravagant prodigal of affection". The author examines the relationships with the female gender starting with his Mother. He continues with Jean Armour, Nelly Kilpatrick, Peggy Chalmers who rejected him, Clarinda and finally Maria Riddell who came nearest to being his intellectual equal.

  • About the Author

    Hugh Douglas (1910-1979) was a Scottish literary critic, editor, and scholar who made significant contributions to the study of Scottish literature, particularly the works of Robert Burns.

    Douglas was born in Lanarkshire and educated at the University of Glasgow, where he earned a degree in English language and literature. After graduating, he worked as a teacher and later as an editor for the Oxford University Press. In 1949, he returned to Scotland to become a lecturer at the University of Edinburgh, where he would spend the rest of his academic career.

    Douglas was a leading authority on Robert Burns, and his work on the poet helped to establish Burns's reputation as a major literary figure. He edited several editions of Burns's works, including a complete edition published in 1968. He also wrote extensively on Burns, publishing numerous essays and articles on the poet's life and work. Douglas was particularly interested in Burns's use of language, and his scholarship helped to highlight the poet's innovative use of Scots dialect.

    In addition to his work on Burns, Douglas was also an important figure in the study of Scottish literature more broadly. He edited several anthologies of Scottish poetry and wrote critical studies of other Scottish writers, including Walter Scott and Robert Louis Stevenson.

    Douglas's contributions to Scottish literary studies were widely recognized during his lifetime, and he received numerous honors and awards for his work. He was a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and was awarded an OBE in 1969 for his services to Scottish literature. Today, he is remembered as one of the leading scholars of Scottish literature of the mid-twentieth century, and his work on Burns continues to influence the study of the poet today.

  • Condition Notes

    A good clean copy.

     

    Please check the images associated with this Book to gain a clear insight into the book's condition and if you require further details please send an email enquiry.

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