AbstractThis article argues that the frame narratives of the first two installments of Sir Walter Scott's Tales of My Landlord series provide insight into Scott's politics of transmission as he explores how local historical narratives might be recovered from obscurity and put into national circulation without losing their authenticity within a rapidly expanding print market. This exploration results in a series of renegotiations--between spatial and temporal transmission, between reproductions and originals, between the local and the national--that help to articulate a modern conception of literary value that lays the groundwork for institutionalizing the English novel.
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Iwara, A. I., Godwin, O. I., Friday, E. U., Kelvin, N. E., & Mbeh, U. E. (2017). Biochemical and antioxidants activity of crude, methanol and n-hexane fractions of Vernonia calvoana on streptozotocin induced diabetic rats. Journal of Pharmacognosy and Phytotherapy, 9(3), 24–34. https://doi.org/10.5897/jpp2016.0440
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