Research Output
Hugh MacDiarmid’s Impossible Community
  This chapter suggests two main related points. The overarching contention is that Hugh MacDiarmid was a poetic, political, polemical, and metaphysical impossibilist (rather than merely the extremist of caricature). More particularly, in an attempt to escape the impossible community of the Kailyard – provincial, retrogressive, Christian, Scotland-as-Brigadoon – MacDiarmid fashioned an equally impossible if conflicting community, profoundly singular yet ultimately spiritual, that nonetheless contained residual Kailyard archetypes. The argument is traced through examination of MacDiarmid’s attitude to the Kailyard; work relating to the small communities in which he lived and wrote, and to cities; and the question of his anti-Englishness.

  • Date:

    31 May 2016

  • Publication Status:

    Published

  • Publisher

    Brill Rodopi

  • Library of Congress:

    PN0080 Criticism

  • Dewey Decimal Classification:

    820 English & Old English literatures

Citation

Lyall, S. (2016). Hugh MacDiarmid’s Impossible Community. In S. Lyall (Ed.), Community in Modern Scottish Literature (82-102). Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers

Authors

Editors

Keywords

Hugh McDiarmid; community; Scottish literature; Scottish politics; Kailyard; anti-Englishness;

Monthly Views:

Available Documents