Glasgian Novel in Work of Alasdair Gray
https://doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2021-7-212-226
Abstract
The representation of the urban space in the prose of the major Scottish writer A. Gray on the material of his key novels “Lanark” (1981), 1982, “Janine” (1982) and “Poor things” (1992) is analyzed in the article. It is noted that A. Gray made a significant contribution to the formation of the Glasgian novel, the specificity of which is defined more exactly in the works of M. Burgess and M. Gregorova. It is shown that, like other Glasgian writers, in his works A. Gray reflects on the consequences of the dehumanizing influence of the city on a person, however, in contrast to them, he makes a choice in favor of protagonists who are simultaneously representatives of the working and middle classes. The author note that in the novel “Lanark” the city is shown through the prism of three-time layers: a nostalgic past, a bleak present and an apocalyptic future. It is indicated that mortality becomes the thematic dominant, as a result of which Glasgow acquires the features of the underworld. It is proved that in A. Gray’s prose the Glasgian locus acts as a “place of memory”, while the motive of “recreating” memories from fragmentary facts of urban life plays a significant role in order to reconstruct the historical appearance of Glasgow or create fictitious memories of it in the reader.
About the Author
E. A. MartynenkoRussian Federation
Ekaterina A. Martynenko, postgraduate student, lecturer Department of Theory and History of World Literature
Rostov-on-Don
References
1. Berndt, K. (2016). “The Things We Are”: Alasdair Gray’s Poor Things and the Science of Man. ANGLICA, 25/1: 125—140.
2. Bernstein, S. (1999). Alasdair Gray. London: Assosiate University Press. 187 p.
3. Brandbury, M. (1994). The Modern British Novel. London: Penguin Books. 544 p. ISBN 014023098Х.
4. Burgess, M. (1972). The Glasgow novel, 1870—1970: A bibliography. Glasgow: Scottish Library Association. 70 p.
5. Dixon, K. (1993). Talking to the People: A Reflection on Recent Glasgow Fiction. Studies in Scottish Literature, 28/1: 92—104.
6. Elliot, R. D. (1977). The Glasgow novel. Glasgow: Arts Faculty of the University of Glasgow. 482 p.
7. Gregorová, M. (2015). Representing Urban Space in the Twentieth-Century Scottish Novel. Olomouc: Univerzita Palackeho v Olomouci. 151 p.
8. Harrison, W. M. (1995). The Power of Work in the Novels of Alasdair Gray. The Review of Contemporary Fiction: Stanley Elkin, Alasdair Gray, 15 (2): 162—169.
9. Klaus, H. G. (2018). James Kelman. U.K: Liverpool University Press. 122 p.
10. McIlvanney, L. (2012). The Glasgow Novel. The Cambridge Companion to Scottish Literature. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 217—232. ISBN 9781139045407.
11. Miller, G. (2005). Alasdair Gray: The Fiction of Communione. Amsterdam: Rodopi B. V. 114 p.
12. Witchi, B. (1991). Glasgo Urban Writing and Postmodernism. Frankfurt am Main: Peterland. 254 p.
13. Zherdeva, Yu. A. (2015). The sense of place as a category of social memory. International Journal of Cultural Studies, 2 (19): 5—11. (In Russ).
Review
For citations:
Martynenko E.A. Glasgian Novel in Work of Alasdair Gray. Nauchnyi dialog. 2021;1(7):212-226. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.24224/2227-1295-2021-7-212-226