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Scottish Renaissance

The Scottish Renaissance (Scottish Gaelic: Ath-bheòthachadh na h-Alba; Scots: Scots Renaissance) was a mainly literary movement of the early to mid-20th century that can be seen as the Scottish version of modernism. It is sometimes referred to as the Scottish literary renaissance, although its influence went beyond literature into music, visual arts, and politics (among other fields). The writers and artists of the Scottish Renaissance displayed a profound interest in both modern philosophy and technology, as well as incorporating folk influences, and a strong concern for the fate of Scotland's declining languages.

It has been seen as a parallel to other movements elsewhere, including the Irish Literary Revival, the Harlem Renaissance (in America), the Bengal Renaissance (in Kolkata, India) and the Jindyworobak Movement (in Australia), which emphasised indigenous folk traditions.

Beginnings

The term "Scottish Renaissance" was brought into critical prominence by the French Languedoc poet and scholar Denis Saurat in his article "Le Groupe de la Renaissance Écossaise", which was published in the Revue Anglo-Américaine in April 1924.[1] The term had appeared much earlier, however, in the work of the polymathic Patrick Geddes[2] and in a 1922 book review by Christopher Murray Grieve ("Hugh MacDiarmid") for the Scottish Chapbook that predicted a "Scottish Renascence as swift and irresistible as was the Belgian Revival between 1880 and 1910",[3] involving such figures as Lewis Spence and Marion Angus.[4]

These earlier references make clear the connections between the Scottish Renaissance and the Celtic Twilight and Celtic Revival movements of the late 19th century, which helped reawaken a spirit of cultural nationalism among Scots of the modernist generations. Where these earlier movements had been steeped in a sentimental and nostalgic Celticism, however, the modernist-influenced Renaissance would seek a rebirth of Scottish national culture that would both look back to the medieval "makar" poets, William Dunbar and Robert Henrysoun, as well as look towards such contemporary influences as T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, and D. H. Lawrence, or (more locally) R. B. Cunninghame Graham.[5]

The turn of the 20th century saw the first stirrings of a new era in Scottish arts and letters. As writers such as George Douglas Brown railed against the "Kailyard school" that had come to dominate Scottish letters, producing satiric, realist accounts of Scottish rural life in novels like The House with the Green Shutters (1901), Scots language poets such as Violet Jacob and Marion Angus undertook a quiet revival of regionally inflected poetry in the Lowland vernacular. The aforementioned Patrick Geddes would continue his foundational work in town and regional planning, developing the triad "Place - Work - Folk" as a matrix for new thinking about the relationships between people and their local environments. In the realm of visual arts, John Duncan would refine his Celtic myth inspired Symbolist painting to include an increasing emphasis on collage and the flatness of the image. In architecture and the decorative arts, the towering figures of Charles Rennie Mackintosh and the Glasgow Four would give Scotland its very own "school" of modern design and help create the "Glasgow style". Scotland in the early 20th century was experiencing an efflorescence of creative activity, but there was not yet a sense of a particular shared movement or an overt national inflection to all of this artistic effort.[citation needed]

Literary renaissance

 
A bust of Hugh MacDiarmid sculpted in 1927 by William Lamb

It was not until the literary efforts of Hugh MacDiarmid that the Scottish Renaissance can properly be said to have begun. Starting in 1920, C. M. Grieve (having not yet adopted his nom de plume of Hugh MacDiarmid) began publishing a series of three short anthologies entitled Northern Numbers: Being Representative Selections from Certain Living Scottish Poets (including works by John Buchan, Violet Jacob, Neil Munro, and Grieve himself). These anthologies, which appeared one each year from 1920–22, along with his founding and editing of the Scottish Chapbook review (in the annus mirabilis of Modernism, 1922), established Grieve/MacDiarmid as the father and central figure of the burgeoning Scottish Renaissance movement that he had prophesied.[6] By about 1925, MacDiarmid had largely abandoned his English language poetry and began to write in a kind of "synthetic Scots" known as Lallans, that was a hybrid of regional Scots dialects and lexicographical artifacts exhumed from Jamieson's Dictionary of the Scottish Language, often grafted onto a Standard English grammatical structure. His poetic works included "A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle" (1926). This had an electrifying effect on the literary landscape of the time.[7]

Other writers soon followed in MacDiarmid's footsteps and also wrote in Lallans, including the poets Edwin Muir (1887–1959) and William Soutar (1898–1943), who pursued an exploration of identity, rejecting nostalgia and parochialism and engaging with social and political issues.[8] Some writers that emerged after the Second World War followed MacDiarmid by writing in Scots, including Robert Garioch (1909–1981) and Sydney Goodsir Smith (1915–1975). The Glaswegian poet Edwin Morgan (1920–2010) became known for translations of works from a wide range of European languages. He was also the first Scots Makar (the official national poet), appointed by the inaugural Scottish government in 2004.[9] Alexander Gray was an academic and poet, but is chiefly remembered for his translations into Scots from the German and Danish ballad traditions into Scots, including Arrows. A Book of German Ballads and Folksongs Attempted in Scots (1932) and Four-and-Forty. A Selection of Danish Ballads Presented in Scots (1954).[10]

The Scottish Renaissance increasingly concentrated on the novel, particularly after the 1930s when Hugh MacDiarmid was in isolation in Shetland and its leadership moved to novelist Neil Gunn (1891–1973). Gunn's novels, beginning with The Grey Coast (1926), and including Highland River (1937) and The Green Isle of the Great Deep (1943), were largely written in English and not the Scots preferred by MacDiarmid, focused on the Highlands of his birth and were notable for their narrative experimentation.[11] Other major figures associated with the movement include George Blake (1893–1961), A. J. Cronin (1896–1981), Eric Linklater (1899–1974) and Lewis Grassic Gibbon (1901–35). There were also a large number of female authors associated with the movement, who demonstrated a growing feminine consciousness. They included Catherine Carswell (1879–1946), Willa Muir (1890–1970),[11] Nan Shepherd (1893–1981)[8] and most prolifically Naomi Mitchison (1897–1999).[11] All were born within a fifteen-year period and, although they cannot be described as members of a single school, they all pursued an exploration of identity, rejecting nostalgia and parochialism and engaging with social and political issues.[8] Physician A. J. Cronin is now often seen as sentimental, but his early work, particularly his first novel Hatter's Castle (1931) and his most successful The Citadel (1937) were a deliberate reaction against the Kailyard tradition, exposing the hardships and vicissitudes of the lives of ordinary people,[12] He was the most translated Scottish author in the twentieth century.[13] George Blake pioneered the exploration of the experiences of the working class in his major works such as The Shipbuilders (1935). Eric Linklater produced comedies of the absurd including Juan in America (1931) dealing with prohibition America, and a critique of modern war in Private Angelo (1946). Lewis Grassic Gibbon, the pseudonym of James Leslie Mitchell, produced one of the most important realisations of the ideas of the Scottish Renaissance in his trilogy A Scots Quair (Sunset Song, 1932, Cloud Howe, 1933 and Grey Granite, 1934), which mixed different Scots dialects with the narrative voice.[11] Other works that investigated the working class included James Barke's (1905–58), Major Operation (1936) and The Land of the Leal (1939) and J. F. Hendry's (1912–86) Fernie Brae (1947).[11]

The parallel revitalisation of Gaelic poetry, known as the Scottish Gaelic Renaissance, was largely due to the work of Sorley Maclean (Somhairle MacGill-Eain, 1911–96). A native of Skye and a native Gaelic speaker, he abandoned the stylistic conventions of the tradition and opened up new possibilities for composition with his poem Dàin do Eimhir (Poems to Eimhir, 1943). His work inspired a new generation to take up nua bhàrdachd (the new poetry). These included George Campbell Hay (Deòrsa Mac Iain Dheòrsa, 1915–1984), Lewis-born poets Derick Thomson (Ruaraidh MacThòmais, 1921–2012) and Iain Crichton Smith (Iain Mac a' Ghobhainn, 1928–98). They all focused on the issues of exile, the fate of the Gaelic language and bi-culturalism.[14]

Art

 
Stanley Cursiter, Regatta, (1913)

The ideas of a distinctive modern Scottish art were expressed in the inter-war period by figures including Stanley Cursiter (1887–1976), William McCance (1894–1970), William Johnstone (1897–1981) and J. D. Fergusson (1874–1961).[15] Stanley Cursiter was influenced by the Celtic revival, post-impressionism and Futurism, as can be seen in his Rain on Princes Street (1913) and Regatta (1913). He went on to be a major painter of the coastline of his native Orkney, director of the National Gallery of Scotland and proposed the creation of a National Gallery of Modern Art in 1930.[16][17] Fergusson was one of the few British artists who could claim to have played a part in the creation of modernism and probably played a major part in the formulation of MacDiarmid's thought. His interest in machine imagery can be seen in paintings like Damaged Destroyer (1918). He co-operated with MacDiarmid on the journal Scottish Art and Letters and MacDiarmid quoted extensively from his work.[18]

William McCance's early work was in a bold post-impressionist style. After World War I he moved to London with his wife, fellow student Agnes Miller Parker (1895-1980), where he joined the same circles as Fergusson, vorticist Wyndham Lewis (1882-1957) and nationalist composer Francis George Scott. Under these influences his work became increasingly abstract and influenced by vorticism, as can be seen in Women on an Elevator (1925) and The Engineer and his Wife (1925).[19] William Johnstone (1897–1981) was a cousin of F. G. Scott and met MacDiarmid while a student at Edinburgh. He studied cubism, surrealism and was introduced to new American art by his wife the sculptor Flora Macdonald. He moved towards abstraction, attempting to utilise aspects of landscape, poetry and Celtic art. His most significant work, A Point in Time (1929–38), has been described by art historian Duncan Macmillan as "one of the most important Scottish pictures of the century and one of the most remarkable pictures by any British painter in the period".[20][16][21]

Other artists strongly influenced by modernism included James McIntosh Patrick (1907–98) and Edward Baird (1904–49).[16] Both trained in Glasgow, but spent most of their careers in and around their respective native cities of Dundee and Montrose. Both were influenced by surrealism and the work of Bruegel and focused on landscape, as can be seen in McIntosh Patrick's Traquair House (1938) and more overtly Baird's The Birth of Venus (1934). Before his success in painting, McIntosh Patrick gained a reputation as an etcher. Leading figures in the field in the inter-war period included William Wilson (1905–72) and Ian Fleming (1906-94).[22]

Music and dance

The ideas of the Scottish Renaissance were brought to classical music by Francis George Scott (1880–1958), MacDiarmid's former teacher, who set to music several of the poet's works.[23] Lancashire-born Ronald Stevenson (b. 1938) collaborated with Scott and both wrote in twelve-tone technique. Stevenson developed a musical idiom derived from Scottish music, creating settings of folk songs including concertos for his instrument, the piano (1966 and 1972). He also adapted work by Scottish Renaissance poets such as MacDiarmid, Sorley Maclean and William Soutar. The influence of Dmitri Shostakovich (1906–1975) was evident in the initials used in his large-scale piano work Passacaglia on DSCH (1963).[24]

Robin Orr (1909–2006) and Cedric Thorpe Davie (1913–1983) were influenced by modernism and Scottish musical cadences.[24] The influence of modernism can also be heard in the work of Erik Chisholm (1904–1965) in his Pibroch Piano Concerto (1930) and the Straloch suite for Orchestra (1933) and the sonata An Riobhan Dearg (1939). In 1928 he founded the Scottish Ballet Society (later the Celtic Ballet) with choreographer Margaret Morris, the long term partner of J. D. Fergusson. Together they created several ballets, including The Forsaken Mermaid (1940). He was also instrumental in the foundation of the Active Society for the Propagation of Contemporary Music, for which he brought leading composers to Glasgow to perform their work.[24]

Decline and influence

 
Scottish Poetry Library, Crichton's Close, Edinburgh. The Scottish Renaissance revived interest in Scottish poetry

Although many of the participants were to live until the 1970s and later, the truly revolutionary aspect of the Scottish Renaissance can be said to have been over by the 1960s, when it became eclipsed by various other movements, often international in nature.

The most famous clash was at the 1962 Edinburgh Writers Festival, where Hugh MacDiarmid denounced Alexander Trocchi, a younger Scottish writer, as "cosmopolitan scum", and Trocchi claimed "sodomy" as a basis for his own writing. This is often seen as a clash of the generations, although it is rarely reported that the two writers corresponded with each other later, and became friends. Both were controversialists of sorts.

The Scottish Renaissance also had a profound effect on the Scottish independence movement, and the roots of the Scottish National Party may be said to be firmly in it.

The revival in both of Scotland's indigenous languages is partly drawn from the renaissance.

Major figures

Other people connected with the Scottish renaissance, not mentioned previously, are listed below.

Note: These figures were not all contemporaries of the first generation of Scottish Renaissance writers and artists who emerged in the 1920s and 1930s. However, most did become involved with the movement in some form through interactions with figures such as Gunn or MacDiarmid, even if at a slightly later date.

People generally considered to be post-renaissance but strongly affected by it:

See also

References

  1. ^ I. Ousby ed., The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English (1995) p. 839.
  2. ^ P. Geddes, The Scots Renascence, in The Evergreen: A Northern Seasonal, Spring 1895, Patrick Geddes and Colleagues, Lawnmarket, Edinburgh
  3. ^ Quoted in Margery Palmer McCulloch, ed., Modernism and Nationalism: Literature and Society in Scotland 1918-1939. Glasgow: Association for Scottish Literary Studies, 2004. 52-53.
  4. ^ I. Ousby ed., The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English (1995), p. 839.
  5. ^ D. Daiches ed., The Penguin Companion to Literature 1 (1971) p. 333.
  6. ^ D. Daiches ed., The Penguin Companion to Literature 1 (London: Penguin, 1971), p. 333.
  7. ^ D. Daiches ed., The Penguin Companion to Literature 1 (London: Penguin, 1971) p. 333.
  8. ^ a b c , Visiting Arts: Scotland: Cultural Profile, archived from the original on 30 September 2011
  9. ^ , The Scottish Government, 16 February 2004, archived from the original on 4 February 2012, retrieved 28 October 2007
  10. ^ J. Corbett, Written in the Language of the Scottish Nation: A History of Literary Translation Into Scots (Multilingual Matters, 1999), ISBN 1853594318, pp. 161-4.
  11. ^ a b c d e C. Craig, "Culture: modern times (1914-): the novel", in M. Lynch, ed., The Oxford Companion to Scottish History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001), ISBN 0-19-211696-7, pp. 157-9.
  12. ^ R. Crawford, Scotland's Books: a History of Scottish Literature (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009), ISBN 0-19-538623-X, p. 587.
  13. ^ P. Barnaby and T. Hubbard, "The international reception and impact of Scottish literature of the period since 1918", in I. Brown, ed., The Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature: Modern transformations: new identities (from 1918) (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2007), ISBN 0748624821, p. 32.
  14. ^ J. MacDonald, "Gaelic literature" in M. Lynch, ed., The Oxford Companion to Scottish History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001), ISBN 0-19-211696-7, pp. 255-7.
  15. ^ D. Macmillan, Scottish Art 1460-1990 (Edinburgh: Mainstream, 1990), ISBN 0500203334, p. 348.
  16. ^ a b c M. Gardiner, Modern Scottish Culture (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2005), ISBN 0-7486-2027-3, p. 173.
  17. ^ M. MacDonald, Scottish Art (London: Thames and Hudson, 2000), ISBN 0500203334, pp. 163-4.
  18. ^ D. Macmillan, Scottish Art 1460-1990 (Edinburgh: Mainstream, 1990), ISBN 0500203334, p. 350.
  19. ^ D. Macmillan, Scottish Art 1460-1990 (Edinburgh: Mainstream, 1990), ISBN 0500203334, pp. 348-50.
  20. ^ D. Macmillan, Scottish Art 1460-1990 (Edinburgh: Mainstream, 1990), ISBN 0500203334, pp. 351-2.
  21. ^ D. Macmillan, "Review: Painters in Parallel: William Johnstone & William Gillies", Scotsman.com, 19 January 2012, retrieved 8 May 2012.
  22. ^ M. MacDonald, Scottish Art (London: Thames and Hudson, 2000), ISBN 0500203334, pp. 175-6.
  23. ^ M. P. McCulloch, Scottish Modernism and Its Contexts 1918-1959: Literature, National Identity and Cultural Exchange (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2009), ISBN 0748634746, p. 37.
  24. ^ a b c M. Gardiner, Modern Scottish Culture (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2005), ISBN 0748620273, pp. 193-8.

Further reading

  • Bowering, Marilyn (1981), review of Seven Poets, in Murray, Glen (ed.), Cencrastus No. 7, Winter 1981-82, p. 47, ISSN 0264-0856
  • Bruce, George (1980), F.G. Scott 1880 - 1958, in Cencrastus No. 4, Winter 1980-81, pp. 27 & 28, ISSN 0264-0856
  • Fraser, Linda J. & Benvie, Rachel H.F. (2017), Ideas o' Their Ain: Montrose & The Scottish Renaissance, Angus Council Museums and Galleries
  • Gifford, Douglas (1982), In Search of the Scottish Renaissance: The Reprinting of Scottish Fiction, in Cencrastus No. 9, Summer 1982, pp. 26 – 30, ISSN 0264-0856
  • Finlay, Ian Hamilton (1962), review of The Scots Literary Tradition by John Speirs, in Gordon, Giles (ed.), New Saltire 4: Summer 1962, The Saltire Society, Edinburgh, pp. 79 – 81
  • Glen, Duncan (1964), Hugh MacDiarmid and the Scottish Renaissance, W. & R. Chambers, ASIN B0000CME6P
  • Lindsay, Maurice (1980), Francis George Scott and the Scottish Renaissance, Paul Harris, ISBN 9780904505436
  • McCaffery, Ritchie (2020), Sydney Goodsir Smith, Poet: Essays on His Life and Work, Brill Rodopi, ISBN 978-90-04-42510-1
  • McCulloch, Marjory Palmer (2004), Modernism and Nationalism: Literature and Society in Scotland 1918 - 1939, The Association of Scottish Literary Studies, Glasgow, ISBN 0-948877-59-6
  • Third Eye Centre (1981), Seven Poets: Hugh MacDiarmid, Norman MacCaig, Iain Crichton Smith, George Mackay Brown, Robert Garioch, Sorley MacLean, Edwin Morgan, ISBN 9780906474143
  • Thomson, David Cleghorn (ed.) (1932), Scotland in Quest of Her Youth Oliver and Boyd, Edinburgh and London
  • Wright, Gordon (1969), Helen B. Cruickshank's Fifty Years of Verse Writing, in Neill, William (ed.), Calgacus, Volume 2, Number 3, Summer 1969, pp. 34 & 35

External links

  • Cultural Profile of Scotland

scottish, renaissance, movement, late, 15th, century, early, 17th, century, renaissance, scotland, scottish, gaelic, bheòthachadh, alba, scots, scots, renaissance, mainly, literary, movement, early, 20th, century, that, seen, scottish, version, modernism, some. For the movement in the late 15th century to early 17th century see Renaissance in Scotland The Scottish Renaissance Scottish Gaelic Ath bheothachadh na h Alba Scots Scots Renaissance was a mainly literary movement of the early to mid 20th century that can be seen as the Scottish version of modernism It is sometimes referred to as the Scottish literary renaissance although its influence went beyond literature into music visual arts and politics among other fields The writers and artists of the Scottish Renaissance displayed a profound interest in both modern philosophy and technology as well as incorporating folk influences and a strong concern for the fate of Scotland s declining languages It has been seen as a parallel to other movements elsewhere including the Irish Literary Revival the Harlem Renaissance in America the Bengal Renaissance in Kolkata India and the Jindyworobak Movement in Australia which emphasised indigenous folk traditions Contents 1 Beginnings 2 Literary renaissance 3 Art 4 Music and dance 5 Decline and influence 6 Major figures 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBeginnings EditThe term Scottish Renaissance was brought into critical prominence by the French Languedoc poet and scholar Denis Saurat in his article Le Groupe de la Renaissance Ecossaise which was published in the Revue Anglo Americaine in April 1924 1 The term had appeared much earlier however in the work of the polymathic Patrick Geddes 2 and in a 1922 book review by Christopher Murray Grieve Hugh MacDiarmid for the Scottish Chapbook that predicted a Scottish Renascence as swift and irresistible as was the Belgian Revival between 1880 and 1910 3 involving such figures as Lewis Spence and Marion Angus 4 These earlier references make clear the connections between the Scottish Renaissance and the Celtic Twilight and Celtic Revival movements of the late 19th century which helped reawaken a spirit of cultural nationalism among Scots of the modernist generations Where these earlier movements had been steeped in a sentimental and nostalgic Celticism however the modernist influenced Renaissance would seek a rebirth of Scottish national culture that would both look back to the medieval makar poets William Dunbar and Robert Henrysoun as well as look towards such contemporary influences as T S Eliot Ezra Pound and D H Lawrence or more locally R B Cunninghame Graham 5 The turn of the 20th century saw the first stirrings of a new era in Scottish arts and letters As writers such as George Douglas Brown railed against the Kailyard school that had come to dominate Scottish letters producing satiric realist accounts of Scottish rural life in novels like The House with the Green Shutters 1901 Scots language poets such as Violet Jacob and Marion Angus undertook a quiet revival of regionally inflected poetry in the Lowland vernacular The aforementioned Patrick Geddes would continue his foundational work in town and regional planning developing the triad Place Work Folk as a matrix for new thinking about the relationships between people and their local environments In the realm of visual arts John Duncan would refine his Celtic myth inspired Symbolist painting to include an increasing emphasis on collage and the flatness of the image In architecture and the decorative arts the towering figures of Charles Rennie Mackintosh and the Glasgow Four would give Scotland its very own school of modern design and help create the Glasgow style Scotland in the early 20th century was experiencing an efflorescence of creative activity but there was not yet a sense of a particular shared movement or an overt national inflection to all of this artistic effort citation needed Literary renaissance EditSee also Literature in modern Scotland and Scots language literature A bust of Hugh MacDiarmid sculpted in 1927 by William Lamb It was not until the literary efforts of Hugh MacDiarmid that the Scottish Renaissance can properly be said to have begun Starting in 1920 C M Grieve having not yet adopted his nom de plume of Hugh MacDiarmid began publishing a series of three short anthologies entitled Northern Numbers Being Representative Selections from Certain Living Scottish Poets including works by John Buchan Violet Jacob Neil Munro and Grieve himself These anthologies which appeared one each year from 1920 22 along with his founding and editing of the Scottish Chapbook review in the annus mirabilis of Modernism 1922 established Grieve MacDiarmid as the father and central figure of the burgeoning Scottish Renaissance movement that he had prophesied 6 By about 1925 MacDiarmid had largely abandoned his English language poetry and began to write in a kind of synthetic Scots known as Lallans that was a hybrid of regional Scots dialects and lexicographical artifacts exhumed from Jamieson s Dictionary of the Scottish Language often grafted onto a Standard English grammatical structure His poetic works included A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle 1926 This had an electrifying effect on the literary landscape of the time 7 Other writers soon followed in MacDiarmid s footsteps and also wrote in Lallans including the poets Edwin Muir 1887 1959 and William Soutar 1898 1943 who pursued an exploration of identity rejecting nostalgia and parochialism and engaging with social and political issues 8 Some writers that emerged after the Second World War followed MacDiarmid by writing in Scots including Robert Garioch 1909 1981 and Sydney Goodsir Smith 1915 1975 The Glaswegian poet Edwin Morgan 1920 2010 became known for translations of works from a wide range of European languages He was also the first Scots Makar the official national poet appointed by the inaugural Scottish government in 2004 9 Alexander Gray was an academic and poet but is chiefly remembered for his translations into Scots from the German and Danish ballad traditions into Scots including Arrows A Book of German Ballads and Folksongs Attempted in Scots 1932 and Four and Forty A Selection of Danish Ballads Presented in Scots 1954 10 The Scottish Renaissance increasingly concentrated on the novel particularly after the 1930s when Hugh MacDiarmid was in isolation in Shetland and its leadership moved to novelist Neil Gunn 1891 1973 Gunn s novels beginning with The Grey Coast 1926 and including Highland River 1937 and The Green Isle of the Great Deep 1943 were largely written in English and not the Scots preferred by MacDiarmid focused on the Highlands of his birth and were notable for their narrative experimentation 11 Other major figures associated with the movement include George Blake 1893 1961 A J Cronin 1896 1981 Eric Linklater 1899 1974 and Lewis Grassic Gibbon 1901 35 There were also a large number of female authors associated with the movement who demonstrated a growing feminine consciousness They included Catherine Carswell 1879 1946 Willa Muir 1890 1970 11 Nan Shepherd 1893 1981 8 and most prolifically Naomi Mitchison 1897 1999 11 All were born within a fifteen year period and although they cannot be described as members of a single school they all pursued an exploration of identity rejecting nostalgia and parochialism and engaging with social and political issues 8 Physician A J Cronin is now often seen as sentimental but his early work particularly his first novel Hatter s Castle 1931 and his most successful The Citadel 1937 were a deliberate reaction against the Kailyard tradition exposing the hardships and vicissitudes of the lives of ordinary people 12 He was the most translated Scottish author in the twentieth century 13 George Blake pioneered the exploration of the experiences of the working class in his major works such as The Shipbuilders 1935 Eric Linklater produced comedies of the absurd including Juan in America 1931 dealing with prohibition America and a critique of modern war in Private Angelo 1946 Lewis Grassic Gibbon the pseudonym of James Leslie Mitchell produced one of the most important realisations of the ideas of the Scottish Renaissance in his trilogy A Scots Quair Sunset Song 1932 Cloud Howe 1933 and Grey Granite 1934 which mixed different Scots dialects with the narrative voice 11 Other works that investigated the working class included James Barke s 1905 58 Major Operation 1936 and The Land of the Leal 1939 and J F Hendry s 1912 86 Fernie Brae 1947 11 The parallel revitalisation of Gaelic poetry known as the Scottish Gaelic Renaissance was largely due to the work of Sorley Maclean Somhairle MacGill Eain 1911 96 A native of Skye and a native Gaelic speaker he abandoned the stylistic conventions of the tradition and opened up new possibilities for composition with his poem Dain do Eimhir Poems to Eimhir 1943 His work inspired a new generation to take up nua bhardachd the new poetry These included George Campbell Hay Deorsa Mac Iain Dheorsa 1915 1984 Lewis born poets Derick Thomson Ruaraidh MacThomais 1921 2012 and Iain Crichton Smith Iain Mac a Ghobhainn 1928 98 They all focused on the issues of exile the fate of the Gaelic language and bi culturalism 14 Art EditSee also Art in modern Scotland Stanley Cursiter Regatta 1913 The ideas of a distinctive modern Scottish art were expressed in the inter war period by figures including Stanley Cursiter 1887 1976 William McCance 1894 1970 William Johnstone 1897 1981 and J D Fergusson 1874 1961 15 Stanley Cursiter was influenced by the Celtic revival post impressionism and Futurism as can be seen in his Rain on Princes Street 1913 and Regatta 1913 He went on to be a major painter of the coastline of his native Orkney director of the National Gallery of Scotland and proposed the creation of a National Gallery of Modern Art in 1930 16 17 Fergusson was one of the few British artists who could claim to have played a part in the creation of modernism and probably played a major part in the formulation of MacDiarmid s thought His interest in machine imagery can be seen in paintings like Damaged Destroyer 1918 He co operated with MacDiarmid on the journal Scottish Art and Letters and MacDiarmid quoted extensively from his work 18 William McCance s early work was in a bold post impressionist style After World War I he moved to London with his wife fellow student Agnes Miller Parker 1895 1980 where he joined the same circles as Fergusson vorticist Wyndham Lewis 1882 1957 and nationalist composer Francis George Scott Under these influences his work became increasingly abstract and influenced by vorticism as can be seen in Women on an Elevator 1925 and The Engineer and his Wife 1925 19 William Johnstone 1897 1981 was a cousin of F G Scott and met MacDiarmid while a student at Edinburgh He studied cubism surrealism and was introduced to new American art by his wife the sculptor Flora Macdonald He moved towards abstraction attempting to utilise aspects of landscape poetry and Celtic art His most significant work A Point in Time 1929 38 has been described by art historian Duncan Macmillan as one of the most important Scottish pictures of the century and one of the most remarkable pictures by any British painter in the period 20 16 21 Other artists strongly influenced by modernism included James McIntosh Patrick 1907 98 and Edward Baird 1904 49 16 Both trained in Glasgow but spent most of their careers in and around their respective native cities of Dundee and Montrose Both were influenced by surrealism and the work of Bruegel and focused on landscape as can be seen in McIntosh Patrick s Traquair House 1938 and more overtly Baird s The Birth of Venus 1934 Before his success in painting McIntosh Patrick gained a reputation as an etcher Leading figures in the field in the inter war period included William Wilson 1905 72 and Ian Fleming 1906 94 22 Music and dance EditSee also Classical music in Scotland The ideas of the Scottish Renaissance were brought to classical music by Francis George Scott 1880 1958 MacDiarmid s former teacher who set to music several of the poet s works 23 Lancashire born Ronald Stevenson b 1938 collaborated with Scott and both wrote in twelve tone technique Stevenson developed a musical idiom derived from Scottish music creating settings of folk songs including concertos for his instrument the piano 1966 and 1972 He also adapted work by Scottish Renaissance poets such as MacDiarmid Sorley Maclean and William Soutar The influence of Dmitri Shostakovich 1906 1975 was evident in the initials used in his large scale piano work Passacaglia on DSCH 1963 24 Robin Orr 1909 2006 and Cedric Thorpe Davie 1913 1983 were influenced by modernism and Scottish musical cadences 24 The influence of modernism can also be heard in the work of Erik Chisholm 1904 1965 in his Pibroch Piano Concerto 1930 and the Straloch suite for Orchestra 1933 and the sonata An Riobhan Dearg 1939 In 1928 he founded the Scottish Ballet Society later the Celtic Ballet with choreographer Margaret Morris the long term partner of J D Fergusson Together they created several ballets including The Forsaken Mermaid 1940 He was also instrumental in the foundation of the Active Society for the Propagation of Contemporary Music for which he brought leading composers to Glasgow to perform their work 24 Decline and influence EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Scottish Poetry Library Crichton s Close Edinburgh The Scottish Renaissance revived interest in Scottish poetry Although many of the participants were to live until the 1970s and later the truly revolutionary aspect of the Scottish Renaissance can be said to have been over by the 1960s when it became eclipsed by various other movements often international in nature The most famous clash was at the 1962 Edinburgh Writers Festival where Hugh MacDiarmid denounced Alexander Trocchi a younger Scottish writer as cosmopolitan scum and Trocchi claimed sodomy as a basis for his own writing This is often seen as a clash of the generations although it is rarely reported that the two writers corresponded with each other later and became friends Both were controversialists of sorts The Scottish Renaissance also had a profound effect on the Scottish independence movement and the roots of the Scottish National Party may be said to be firmly in it The revival in both of Scotland s indigenous languages is partly drawn from the renaissance Major figures EditOther people connected with the Scottish renaissance not mentioned previously are listed below Note These figures were not all contemporaries of the first generation of Scottish Renaissance writers and artists who emerged in the 1920s and 1930s However most did become involved with the movement in some form through interactions with figures such as Gunn or MacDiarmid even if at a slightly later date George Bain who led a revival of Celtic Art Alan Bold MacDiarmid s biographer and critic James Bridie playwright George Mackay Brown poet author and dramatist Catherine Carswell novelist biographer of Robert Burns and D H Lawrence A J Cronin doctor novelist Helen Cruickshank poet who provided a focal point for the social scene Robert Garioch poet Isabel Frances Grant ethnographer George Campbell Hay Deorsa Mac Iain Deorsa poet translator John MacDougall Hay novelist journalist father of George Campbell Hay Robert Hurd architect Robert Kemp playwright Jessie Kesson novelist playwright Archie Lamont poet nationalist pamphleteer William Lamb sculptor Maurice Lindsay poet critic Eric Linklater novelist and politician Norman MacCaig poet William McCance painter Fionn MacColla Thomas Tom Douglas MacDonald novelist historian Compton MacKenzie novelist journalist Agnes Mure Mackenzie writer and historian Robert McLellan Scots language dramatist F Marian McNeill folklorist Naomi Mitchison novelist memoirist activist Edwin Morgan poet not to be confused with Edwin Muir Willa Muir novelist translator Nan Shepherd novelist poet Tom Scott poet translator critic George Scott Moncrieff novelist playwright poet journalist David Cleghorn Thomson journalist and broadcaster Derick Thomson Ruaraidh MacThomais poet Wendy Wood political campaigner artist and writer Douglas Young poet translator essayist People generally considered to be post renaissance but strongly affected by it William Neill poet James Robertson novelist and poet Iain Crichton Smith Iain Mac a Ghobhainn poet novelist John HerdmanSee also EditIan Hamilton Finlay Muriel Spark Alasdair Gray ScottishnessReferences Edit I Ousby ed The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English 1995 p 839 P Geddes The Scots Renascence in The Evergreen A Northern Seasonal Spring 1895 Patrick Geddes and Colleagues Lawnmarket Edinburgh Quoted in Margery Palmer McCulloch ed Modernism and Nationalism Literature and Society in Scotland 1918 1939 Glasgow Association for Scottish Literary Studies 2004 52 53 I Ousby ed The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English 1995 p 839 D Daiches ed The Penguin Companion to Literature 1 1971 p 333 D Daiches ed The Penguin Companion to Literature 1 London Penguin 1971 p 333 D Daiches ed The Penguin Companion to Literature 1 London Penguin 1971 p 333 a b c The Scottish Renaissance and beyond Visiting Arts Scotland Cultural Profile archived from the original on 30 September 2011 The Scots Makar The Scottish Government 16 February 2004 archived from the original on 4 February 2012 retrieved 28 October 2007 J Corbett Written in the Language of the Scottish Nation A History of Literary Translation Into Scots Multilingual Matters 1999 ISBN 1853594318 pp 161 4 a b c d e C Craig Culture modern times 1914 the novel in M Lynch ed The Oxford Companion to Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 19 211696 7 pp 157 9 R Crawford Scotland s Books a History of Scottish Literature Oxford Oxford University Press 2009 ISBN 0 19 538623 X p 587 P Barnaby and T Hubbard The international reception and impact of Scottish literature of the period since 1918 in I Brown ed The Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature Modern transformations new identities from 1918 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2007 ISBN 0748624821 p 32 J MacDonald Gaelic literature in M Lynch ed The Oxford Companion to Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press 2001 ISBN 0 19 211696 7 pp 255 7 D Macmillan Scottish Art 1460 1990 Edinburgh Mainstream 1990 ISBN 0500203334 p 348 a b c M Gardiner Modern Scottish Culture Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2005 ISBN 0 7486 2027 3 p 173 M MacDonald Scottish Art London Thames and Hudson 2000 ISBN 0500203334 pp 163 4 D Macmillan Scottish Art 1460 1990 Edinburgh Mainstream 1990 ISBN 0500203334 p 350 D Macmillan Scottish Art 1460 1990 Edinburgh Mainstream 1990 ISBN 0500203334 pp 348 50 D Macmillan Scottish Art 1460 1990 Edinburgh Mainstream 1990 ISBN 0500203334 pp 351 2 D Macmillan Review Painters in Parallel William Johnstone amp William Gillies Scotsman com 19 January 2012 retrieved 8 May 2012 M MacDonald Scottish Art London Thames and Hudson 2000 ISBN 0500203334 pp 175 6 M P McCulloch Scottish Modernism and Its Contexts 1918 1959 Literature National Identity and Cultural Exchange Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2009 ISBN 0748634746 p 37 a b c M Gardiner Modern Scottish Culture Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2005 ISBN 0748620273 pp 193 8 Further reading EditBowering Marilyn 1981 review of Seven Poets in Murray Glen ed Cencrastus No 7 Winter 1981 82 p 47 ISSN 0264 0856 Bruce George 1980 F G Scott 1880 1958 in Cencrastus No 4 Winter 1980 81 pp 27 amp 28 ISSN 0264 0856 Fraser Linda J amp Benvie Rachel H F 2017 Ideas o Their Ain Montrose amp The Scottish Renaissance Angus Council Museums and Galleries Gifford Douglas 1982 In Search of the Scottish Renaissance The Reprinting of Scottish Fiction in Cencrastus No 9 Summer 1982 pp 26 30 ISSN 0264 0856 Finlay Ian Hamilton 1962 review of The Scots Literary Tradition by John Speirs in Gordon Giles ed New Saltire 4 Summer 1962 The Saltire Society Edinburgh pp 79 81 Glen Duncan 1964 Hugh MacDiarmid and the Scottish Renaissance W amp R Chambers ASIN B0000CME6P Lindsay Maurice 1980 Francis George Scott and the Scottish Renaissance Paul Harris ISBN 9780904505436 McCaffery Ritchie 2020 Sydney Goodsir Smith Poet Essays on His Life and Work Brill Rodopi ISBN 978 90 04 42510 1 McCulloch Marjory Palmer 2004 Modernism and Nationalism Literature and Society in Scotland 1918 1939 The Association of Scottish Literary Studies Glasgow ISBN 0 948877 59 6 Third Eye Centre 1981 Seven Poets Hugh MacDiarmid Norman MacCaig Iain Crichton Smith George Mackay Brown Robert Garioch Sorley MacLean Edwin Morgan ISBN 9780906474143 Thomson David Cleghorn ed 1932 Scotland in Quest of Her Youth Oliver and Boyd Edinburgh and London Wright Gordon 1969 Helen B Cruickshank s Fifty Years of Verse Writing in Neill William ed Calgacus Volume 2 Number 3 Summer 1969 pp 34 amp 35External links EditCultural Profile of Scotland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scottish Renaissance amp oldid 1149985417, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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