Studies in Hogg and his World
Issue No. 33–34, 2024–2025
Contents
Special Issue: Unsettling Scottish Literature
ARTICLES
Unsettled ‘Being-in-the-World’: Ontology, Ecology, and Class in James Hogg’s ‘Surpassing Adventures of Allan Gordon’
Holly Faith Nelson and Sharon Alker
Witnessing, Law, and the Time of the Ghost in James Hogg’s Late Stories
Penny Fielding
Posthumous Revenge and Self-Harm in James Hogg’s Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner
Ellie Hinds
A Removing Against the Bankrupts: The Hoggs’ Eviction of 1779
Angus Sutherland
NOTES
The ‘Small River Called Ellan’: Location and Significance of an Unsettling Encounter in James Hogg’s Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner
Alan V. Murray
James Hogg and Francis Jeffrey: A Re-Discovered Letter and its Background
Patrick Scott
REVIEWS
Remediating the 1820s, edited by Jon Mee and Matthew Sangster
Reviewed by Paul Keen
Caricature and Realism in the Romantic Novel, by Olivia Ferguson
Reviewed by Ian Haywood
Mary Wollstonecraft and Political Economy: The Feminist Critique of Commercial Modernity, by Catherine Packham
Reviewed by Elizabeth Frazer
Wordsworth’s Trauma and Poetry: 1793–1803, by Richard E. Matlak
Reviewed by Philip Shaw
Lawrie Todd: or The Settlers in the Woods, by John Galt. Edited by Regina Hewitt
Reviewed by Rhona Brown
Kirkyard Romanticism: Death, Modernity and Scottish Literature in the Nineteenth Century, by Sarah Sharp
Reviewed by Silke Stroh
Regional Romanticism: Literature and Southwest Scotland, c. 1770–1830, by Gerard Lee McKeever
Reviewed by Dana Graham Lai
Bogle Corbet: or the Emigrants, by John Galt. Edited by Katie Trumpener
Reviewed by Holly Faith Nelson