I write mainly about Scottish literature and cultural politics, with a focus on the era of devolution (1967-present). I did my PhD at the University of Aberdeen, on the literary politics of James Kelman. My wider teaching and research interests lie in modern periodical studies, Anglophone vernacular writing, critical theory, and contemporary literature and politics. I'm currently Associate Dean for Research in the Faculty of Arts and Humanities, Chair of the , and Deputy Lead of the Scottish Graduate School for Arts and Humanities .
My monograph on The Literary Politics of Scottish Devolution: Voice, Class, Nation was published in 2020. It's a cultural history and critique of devolution, focused on the role of writers, critics, magazines and intellectuals, and was described by reviewers as 'an outstanding critical tour-de-force' (Review of English Studies) and 'one of the most original and arresting studies of our political culture written for 10 years’ (Herald). I also edited the Edinburgh Companion to James Kelman, Unstated: Writers on Scottish Independence and (with Marie-Odile Pittin-Hedon and Camille Manfredi) Scottish Writing After Devolution: Edges of the New. With Maria Daniella-Dick and Alex Thomson, I edit the book series for Edinburgh University Press.
I lead the , an AHRC research network partnered with the National Library of Scotland (CI: Malcolm Petrie, St Andrews). The network brings together scholars of Scottish literature, history, politics and publishing to study independent magazine culture of the post-1960s period. Our events and publications aim to stimulate new public interest in these cultural and political magazines, and their role in shaping the Scotland of today. Ultimately, we hope to digitise a range of these magazines and restore them to public circulation. For news and details, see the project website or . An edited volume based on the project (co-edited with Eleanor Bell and Malcolm Petrie) is currently in preparation.
I set up the Stirling Magazines and Periodicals Research Group and am active with the?Stirling Scottish Studies Network. My ongoing interests in Scottish cultural and political magazines follow on from a research project on , which led to this .
With Professor Maria Fusco (Northumbria; PI), I ran an AHRC Research Network on 'De-Localising Dialect', exploring new creative and critical practices for and about vernacular language art. Over three workshops held in 2019, we established an original research agenda to place ‘dialect’ and its debates at the centre of critical attention in the nexus of art, literature and sociolinguistics.
I've published articles and chapters on James Kelman (and masculinity, existentialism, canonicity, inner-speech, vernacular aesthetics), Alistair MacLeod, William McIlvanney, Alice Munro, Andrew O'Hagan, Don Paterson, Robert Louis Stevenson, Alan Warner, Irvine Welsh, Scottish novels of education, vernacular fetishism, the Indyref novel, Scotland's political print-culture, ‘theory’ and cultural nationalism. I am developing projects on Tom Nairn, James Kelman, and the place of dissent within Scottish literary nationalism. With Eleanor Bell and Ian Duncan I co-founded and co-edited the , and I also maintain an .
Occasionally I write for the New Statesman on topics related to my research, and other pieces of cultural and political commentary can be found .
PhD Supervisees
Current:
Calum Esler - 'In the tryst o oor hames': Translingual Poetry and its Impact in Post-Devolutionary Scotland (AHRC-funded; co-supervised with Shanti Graheli and Sadie Ryan at Glasgow)
Irina Nakonechna - Scottish identity and diasporic literature, 1960-present
Neil Conway - The Melancholic Solitary in Modern Scottish Poetry [second supervisor]
Completed:
Maike Dinger - A myth of popular participation? Discourse and the politics of representation in the 2014 Scottish independence referendum (AHRC-funded; co-supervised with Michael Higgins at Strathclyde, completed 2024)
Alice Doyle - Archive and Narrative in the 2014 Scottish Independence Referendum (AHRC-funded; CDP with the National Library of Scotland, completed 2021)
Felix Flores Varona - Remapping Scotland's Literary Influence: José Martí and the (In)Visible Transatlantic Connection (completed 2021)
Mairi A. MacLeod - The Metaphysical Landscapes of Neil M. Gunn (completed 2020)
Harry Josephine Giles (co-supervised with Kathleen Jamie) - Scrievan Orkney's Future: Marginal Language and Speculative Poetries (AHRC-funded; completed 2020)
Arianna Introna - Crip Antagonisms: Autonomist Narratives of Disability in Scottish Writing (AHRC-funded; completed 2018)
Meghan McAvoy - A Critique of Scottish Literary Nationalism (completed 2015)
Neil Syme - The Modern Uncanny: Textuality and Tradition in Post-1970s Scottish Fiction (completed 2014)
Thomas Christie - Ideology, Genre and National Identity in Popular Scottish Fiction, 1975-2006 (completed 2012)
I welcome PhD proposals relating to any of the research areas above.