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    The Making of the Scottish Dream Vision

    The Making of the Scottish Dream Vision by Murray, Kylie M.;

    Series: British Academy Monographs;

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP
    • Date of Publication 19 June 2025

    • ISBN 9780197266809
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages320 pages
    • Size 234x156 mm
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 13
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    Short description:

    This book covers dreams and visions in prose, poetry, Scots, Latin, and English, plus works that do not explicitly contain dreams or visions alongside those that do. It shows how Scotland made its own dream-vision tradition which expressed distinctive Scottish agendas and identities.

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    Long description:

    This book is about how Scotland responded to the dream-vision, Medieval Europe's most widely known literary form and precursor of the novel. Studies abound in Continental and English dream-vision writing: Dante's Divine Comedy, France's Romance of the Rose, and a host of English dream-visions, especially Chaucer. This book shows for the first time that dream-vision was a central aspect of Scotland's literary and intellectual culture across several centuries and languages. It therefore invites new understandings of Medieval and Early Modern Scotland.

    Moreover, its innovative approach to the dream-vision itself looks beyond dream-poetry which is the sole focus of other studies of the genre. Instead, it shows how dream-vision intersected with prose and verse writings, with romance, chronicle, epic, theological works and more. In so doing, it yields a new angle of studying the dream-vision which could be applied to other nations, making this book significant to scholars of global medieval literature.

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction
    Understanding Dream and Vision in the Middle Ages
    Approaching Scotland as Case Study
    Chapter 1: Prior Engagements: Scotland's Early Reception of Dream and Vision
    Historical Writing and Identities in Latin and Scots
    Devotional Texts and Contexts
    French Texts and Contexts
    English Texts and Contexts
    Chapter 2: The Kingis Quair and its Manuscript Context
    The Kingis Quair: a new Scottish dream-vision
    The Kingis Quair's Reception and Authorship
    The Manuscript Context and Revisionary Readings of Chaucer's 'Dream Poetry'
    Troilus and Criseyde in Scotland
    Chapter 3: Bower's Scotichronicon and the Prose-Latin Dream-Vision
    Mystical Visions: Katherine of Alexandria and Bridget of Sweden
    Visions of Royal Scottish Sanctity: Margaret Canmore (1045-93) and Waltheof, abbot of Melrose (d.1159)
    Visions as Reflection and Refraction of the Speculum Principis
    Advice to All: Clerical Visions of Appetite and Greed
    From Latin Prose to Older Scots Verse: The Reception of Bower's Dream-Vision
    Appendix: Table of Dream and Visionary Narratives in the Scotichronicon
    Chapter 4: Prophetic and Nationalist Dream-Visions
    Thomas of Erceldoune and Envisioning the Scottish 'History of the Future'
    Wallace's Nightmare
    Wallace's Dream-Vision of Scotland
    'Worthy Even of Enemy Praise': Wallace's Heavenly Ascent and its Afterlives
    Chapter 5: Rethinking Scotland's Amatory Dream-Vision
    Lancelot of the Laik: Dream-Vision Prologues and Arthurian Advice
    From Courtly Love to Courtly Injustice: Henryson's Testament of Cresseid
    From love at first sight to loss at last sight: Henryson's Testament and Orpheus
    Anti- or Extra-Amatory? The Dream-Visions of Douglas and Dunbar
    Epilogue: 'Mak vpwark and clois our buke'
    Bibliography

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