Hogg's extremely rare periodical of 1810-11 shows him reacting to the writers, personalities, and locales of Scotland's capital city after his move to Edinburgh from Ettrick and his career-change from shepherd and farmer to professional author. His characteristically astute and idiosyncratic vision reveals a rather different city from that of Walter Scott and Francis Jeffrey, and his band of contributors form another audience for his work than the middle-class Tories associated with the later Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine. The Spy includes early versions of some of Hogg's best-known poetry and prose besides a wealth of fascinating lesser-known material.This is the first edition of The Spy since the original edition of 1810-11 was published, and offers a carefully corrected text, full annotation, notes on Hogg's contributors to his paper, and a history of its making. It represents an advance in our knowledge both of Hogg's early writing career and of the city he encountered early in the nineteenth century.
ISBN: | 9780748614172 |
Publication date: | 4th May 2000 |
Author: | James Hogg |
Publisher: | Edinburgh University Press |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 712 pages |
Series: | The Stirling / South Carolina Research Edition of the Collected Works of James Hogg |
Genres: |
Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900 Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers Serials, periodicals, abstracts, indexes |