Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/22333
Appears in Collections:Literature and Languages Journal Articles
Peer Review Status: Refereed
Title: James Hogg's The Profligate Princes: An unconventional treatment of Scottish female sexuality in Romantic writing for the theatre
Author(s): Leonardi, Barbara
Contact Email: barbara.leonardi@stir.ac.uk
Issue Date: Dec-2016
Date Deposited: 22-Oct-2015
Citation: Leonardi B (2016) James Hogg's The Profligate Princes: An unconventional treatment of Scottish female sexuality in Romantic writing for the theatre. Scottish Literary Review, 8 (2), pp. 37-53. http://muse.jhu.edu/article/639462
Abstract: The aim of this article is to shed new light on the dramatic output of James Hogg (1770-1835), a genre of which the Ettrick Shepherd was particularly fond but which, both at the time of first publication and in twentieth-century criticism has attracted little attention. The focus will be on The Profligate Princes (1817), a tragedy where the threat of seduction to its upper-class female characters questions the profitability of their chastity. Contemporary reviewers condemned Hogg’s breach of the Aristotelian unity of action in the plot construction; however, this article argues that Hogg’s tragedy also questions the norms of sympathy and sensibility that shaped the heroine of early nineteenth-century established literature as found, for example, in the grand narrative of the National Tale. A comparative analysis with Hogg’s The Hunting of Badlewe (1813), a former version of the same tragedy, shows that the omissions Hogg made in the subsequent version of The Profligate Princes was dictated by a wish to meet the expectations of contemporary reviewers; while the intertextualities with other Hogg works, such as the novel The Three Perils of Woman (1823) and the narrative poem Mador of the Moor (1816), indicate that Hogg addresses illegitimate pregnancy quite consistently throughout his work, and that in The Profligate Princes such an audacious theme might have challenged ascendant middle-class norms of taste and decorum.
URL: http://muse.jhu.edu/article/639462
Rights: This item has been embargoed for a period. During the embargo please use the Request a Copy feature at the foot of the Repository record to request a copy directly from the author. You can only request a copy if you wish to use this work for your own research or private study. Published in Scottish Literary Review, Winter 2016. http://www.arts.gla.ac.uk/scotlit/asls/SLR.html Embargo agreed by editor

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