Scotland as a space of the imagi-nation in Alasdair Gray's Poor Things
Vol.36,No.1(2010)
Abstract
Keywords:
Scotland; Scottish history; national identity; New Scottish Renaissance; Alasdair Gray
Pages:
147–154
The purpose of this paper is to examine Alasdair Gray's vision of Scotland as a space of a nation that imagines itself, relying on literary creations of its history instead of embracing its actual past. In Poor Things (1992), Gray depicts his country as a narrative construct (a place constructed of narratives), where history has been falsified and replaced by fictionalised versions of the Scottish past. This concept is explored both on the level of content and form, as the novel's structural and formal diversity serves to further undermine the notion of historical truth and examine the tensions between history, memory, identity and literature. This paper will analyse the idea of Scotland as a palimpsestic reality that is constructed of different narratives of the past, show how and why the author creates such a literary space, and discuss its implications for modern Scottish identity.
Scotland; Scottish history; national identity; New Scottish Renaissance; Alasdair Gray
147–154
References
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