The De-rehabilitation of Charles Murray

2018 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 401-410
Author(s):  
John Derbyshire
Keyword(s):  
2012 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 286-296
Author(s):  
Russell K. Nieli
Keyword(s):  

This work is the first book-length study of Scottish Great War literature. Rather than arguing the war exerted a singular influence on the country’s writing, the collection highlights the variety of literary, social, political, and philosophical reverberations of the war in Scotland literature. Part one of the collection presents multi-text case studies of nationalism, pastoralism, Scottish Great War prose, popular literature, women’s, letters to the editor, Gaelic writing, and philosophy. Part two contains essays devoted to individual authors, including canonical figures such as Lewis Grassic Gibbon, Nan Shepherd, Neil Gunn and John Buchan, as well as peripheral authors such as George A. C. Mackinlay, Charles Murray and Ewart Alan Mackintosh.


2020 ◽  
pp. 238-252
Author(s):  
Robert Crawford

Robert Crawford discusses Charles Murray, an Aberdeenshire-born poet who published most of his verse while living in South Africa. Writing in Doric – with a density and nostalgia intensified by his exilic longing for home – Murray produced A Sough o’ War (1917). Although Murray is, certainly from a modern perspective, unpalatably committed to imperial militarism, he nevertheless produced enduring works with a fervent sense of connection to the Aberdeenshire countryside.


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