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Sunday, 27 November 2022

James Hogg’s “The Royal Jubilee: A Scottish Mask”

Here is the Scottish Poetry Library's advertisement for an upcoming event you may be interested in attending if you are in Edinburgh on December 2, 2022. 

James Hogg’s “The Royal Jubilee: A Scottish Mask”

A rehearsed reading, with songs
Friday 2 December, 7 p.m., Scottish Poetry Library, Canongate, Edinburgh. Tickets £5.
There are fairies, and brownies, and shades Amazonian,
Of harper, and sharper, and old Cameronian:—
Some small as pigmies,—some tall as a steeple,—
The spirits are all gone as mad as the people.
James Hogg, “The Royal Jubilee”
On 14 August 1822, as George IV arrived on his ‘jaunt’ to Edinburgh, James Hogg published a new play: “The Royal Jubilee: A Scottish Mask”. The Jubilee is set – like key scenes in Hogg’s best-known work The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner – on Arthur’s Seat. This live rehearsed reading with songs is – in the absence of any evidence otherwise –the first time the play has ever been performed since its publication 200 years ago.
Introduced by Valentina Bold (who edited the “Jubilee” in 1994) and Kirsteen McCue (editor of Hogg’s Songs), the reading will be by a cast including Jo Miller, Dolina MacLennan, Ajay Close, Sheena Wellington and SPL director Asif Khan.

Wednesday, 9 November 2022

Treasure Trove of Letters Discovered: James Hogg Connection

A discovery has been made of hundreds of letters written by a lawyer, George Craig, from the Scottish borders to myriad correspondents. James Hogg was among his clientele. To read more on this discovery, click on the link to the BBC News article 'Long Lost Letters Shine New Light on 1800s Borders Life.'

Sunday, 3 July 2022

Call for Papers: Studies in Hogg and his World (Fall 2023 Issue)

Call for Papers: Studies in Hogg and his World 

 

For its next issue, Studies in Hogg and his World seeks articles on works composed by a wide range of Scottish authors during the years that James Hogg was actively publishing: 1801-1835. Articles on Scottish working-class and / or women authors are especially welcome, as are those that connect the works of the Scottish author under study with those of Hogg (although this is not essential). As usual, the journal also seeks articles on the life and writings of Hogg for the upcoming issue, which is scheduled for publication in the Fall of 2023.  Studies in Hogg and his World is a peer-reviewed print journal. Therefore, all articles, pedagogical papers, and notes submitted will undergo the double-blind peer review process. Submissions should be made on or before May 30, 2023 to Dr. Holly Faith Nelson at Holly.Nelson@twu.ca.     

 

About Studies in Hogg and his World     

Studies in Hogg and his World was established in 1990. Its founding editor was Dr Gillian Hughes, the eminent James Hogg scholar, author of James Hogg: A Life (Oxford University Press, 2007), and editor, co-editor, or associate editor of a great many volumes of Hogg's works for the Stirling / South Carolina Research Edition of the Collected Works of James Hogg. Dr Hughes edited twenty-one issues of Studies in Hogg in his World before handing over the editorship in 2010 to Dr Hans de Groot (1939-2019), Professor Emeritus of the University of Toronto, the editor of the Stirling / South Carolina edition of James Hogg's Highland Journeys, and author of scholarly articles and book chapters on Hogg's works. With the passing of Dr de Groot in 2019, the editorship was taken up by Dr Holly Faith Nelson, Professor of English at Trinity Western University, co-editor, with Dr. Sharon Alkerof James Hogg and the Literary Marketplace: Scottish Romanticism and the Working-Class Author (Ashgate, 2009; Routledge, 2018), and co-author, with Dr Alker, of a series of articles and book chapters on the life and works of James Hogg published over the past two decades.


Friday, 25 February 2022

New Issue of Studies in Hogg and his World

 

Studies in Hogg and His World

Issues 29-30 (2020-2021)

Contents

Douglas Gifford 1940-2020 

DISTINGUISHED SCHOLAR INVITED ESSAY 

Extreme Pastoral: James Hogg and Other Animals

Ian Duncan 

ARTICLES 

Hogg and Hogg, Hogg on Hogg: Finding a Place in the Pantheon of Poets

Graham Tulloch 

An Ettrick Shepherd in London: Bringing the Margins to the Metropolis

Duncan Hotchkiss 

The Plagues o’ the Land: James Hogg, Witchcraft, and the Unsettling of Enlightenment Narratives of History in ‘The Witches of Traquair’ and ‘The Hunt of Eildon

Mari Ulvestad Komnaes

NOTE 

Further Letters from Hogg to the Laidlaws of Blackhouse

Gillian Hughes 

REVIEWS 

Marmion: A Tale of Flodden Field, by Walter Scott

Edited by Ainsley McIntosh

The Shorter Poems, by Walter Scott

Edited by P. D. Garside and Gillian Hughes

Reviewed by Graham Tulloch


Romantic Periodicals in the Twenty-First Century: Eleven Case Studies from ‘Blackwood’s Edinburgh Magazine’

Edited by Nicholas Mason and Tom Mole

Reviewed by Thomas C. Richardson 


Contributions to English, Irish, and American Periodicals

Edited by Adrian Hunter, with associate editor Barbara Leonardi

Reviewed by Dana Graham Lai 


Daniel Cook, Walter Scott and Short Fiction

Reviewed by Graham Tulloch 


Some Passages in the Life of Mr Adam Blair, Minister of the Gospel at Cross-Meikle, by John Gibson Lockhart

Edited by Thomas C. Richardson

Reviewed by Robin MacLachlan