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Approaches to Teaching Scott's Waverley Novels [Kõva köide]

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Scott's Waverley novels, as his fiction is collectively known, are increasingly popular in the classroom, where they fit into courses that explore topics from Victorianism and nationalism to the rise of the publishing industry and the cult of the author. As the editors of this volume recognize, however, Scott's fictions present unusual challenges to instructors. Students need guidance, for instance, in navigating Scott's use of vernacular Scots and antique styles, sorting through his historical and geographical references, and distinguishing his multiple authorial personas. The essays in this volume are designed to help teachers negotiate these and other intriguing features of the Waverley novels.

Part 1, "Materials," guides instructors in selecting appropriate editions of the Waverley novels for classroom use. It also categorizes and lists background and critical studies of Scott's novels and recommends additional readings for students, as well as multimedia instructional resources.

The essays in part 2 examine the novels' relation to Scottish history, Scott's use of language, and concepts of Romantic authorship; consider gender, legal, queer, and multicultural approaches; recommend strategies for teaching Scott alongside other authors such as Jane Austen; and offer detailed ideas for introducing individual novels to students—from imagining Ivanhoe in the context of nineteenth-century medievalism to reconsidering how the ethical issues raised in Old Mortality reflect on religion and violence in our own day.

Preface 1
PART ONE: MATERIALS
Evan Gottlieb
Critical Backgrounds
5
Some Results of the Survey
7
Editions
9
The Instructor's Library
11
Readings for Students
12
Aids to Teaching
13
Map of Scotland, circa 1900
15
PART TWO: APPROACHES
Introduction
19
Ian Duncan
General Approaches
Scottish History in the Waverley Novels
26
Douglas Mack and Suzanne Gilbert
"Something Glee'd": The Uses of Language in Scott's Waverley Novels
38
Janet Sorensen.
The Author of Waverley and the Problem of Romantic Authorship
50
James P Carson.
Teaching the Waverley Novels: An Intertextual Approach
59
Samuel Baker
Course Contexts
"The Poetry of Pure Memory": Teaching Scott's Novels in the Context of Romanticism
67
Celeste Langan
Home and Away with Walter Scott
77
Simon Edwards
Scott, the History of the Novel, and the History of Fiction
88
Ian Duncan
Sir Walter and Plain Jane: Teaching Scott and Austen Together
97
Evan Gottlieb
Teaching the Female Body as Contested Territory
105
Diane Long Hoeveler
Proof and Truth: Teaching the Waverley Novels in the Law and Literature Class
115
Clare A. Simmons
The Limits of Diversity: Using Scott's "The Two Drovers" to Teach Multiculturalism in a Survey or Nonmajors Course
123
Kenneth McNeil
Case Studies
"'Twas Thus the LATEST MINSTREL Sung": Listening to Waverley with an Un/Conventional Ear
130
Caroline McCracken-Flesher
Framing the Covenanters (Again): Teaching Old Mortality in Context
140
Antony J. Hasler
Teaching The Heart of Mid-Lothian
150
David Hewitt
"This Monstrous Passion": Teaching The Bride of Lammermoor and Queer Theory
157
Oliver S. Buckton
Imagining the Middle Ages and Renaissance in Ivanhoe and Kenilworth
164
Graham Tulloch
Thinking Globally: The Talisman and The Surgeon's Daughter
170
Tara Ghoshal Wallace
Notes on Contributors 177
Survey Participants 181
Works Cited 183
Index of Names 199