Langbeschreibung
Since its founding, Medievalia et Humanistica has won worldwide recognition as the first scholarly publication in America to devote itself entirely to medieval and Renaissance studies. Volume 41 is a special issue which showcases twelve articles featured at the International Conference on Medieval and Renaissance Scottish Language and Literature.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Editorial NoteManuscript Submission GuidelinesArticles for Future VolumesPrefaceIntroductionEva von Contzen and Luuk HouwenBooks Beyond Borders: Fresh Findings on Boethius' Reception in Twelfth-Century ScotlandKylie MurrayMalcolm, Margaret, Macbeth and the Miller: Rhetoric and the Re-Shaping of History in Wyntoun's Original ChronicleRhiannon Purdie"Ego Sum Margarita Olim Scotorum Regina": St Margaret and the Idea of the Scottish Nation in Walter Bower's ScotichroniconClaire HarrillScotland, France and the Auld Alliance: Was there a Burgundian Alternative?David DitchburnThe Use of Virgil's Eclogues and Georgics in the Eneados of Gavin DouglasConor LeahyGavin Douglas's Humanist IdentitiesNicola Royan"A Mass of Incoherencies": John Mair, William Caxton, and the Creation of British History in Early Sixteenth-Century ScotlandElizabeth HannaWriting Which, and Whose, Identity? The Challenges of the Gude and Godlie BallatisAlasdair MacDonald"Let all zour verse be Literall": Innovation and Identity in Scottish Alliterative VerseJeremy Scott EckeWriting Sonnets as a Scoto-Britane: Scottish Sonnets, the Union of the Crowns, and Negotiations of IdentityAllison SteensonJames Melville and the "Releife of the longing soule": A Scottish Presbyterian Song of Songs?Jamie Reid BaxterThe Legacy of Scotland's Colonial Schemes: From the 1620s Until NowKirsten Sandrock