Scottish and International Modernisms
Dymock, Emma / McCulloch, Margery Palmer The twentieth-century Scottish renaissance - the literary and artistic revival which followed the end of the First World War - advanced a claim for a distinctive Scottish identity: cultural, political and national. Unlike earlier nineteenth-century Celtic revivals, this renaissance was both outward-looking and confidently contemporary, it embraced continental European influences as well as those of Anglophone writers such as Eliot, Joyce, Poun...