Professor of Scottish Literature, University of Glasgow
Robert Burns & Scottish Thought’. This lecture brings into focus the debt owed to the Scottish Enlightenment by Scotland’s national poet. As well as the influence of philosophy and history on Burns through the work of Adam Smith, Dugald Stewart, William Robertson and others, considered also is the related cultural context of the regional ‘Ayrshire Enlightenment’. Here Burns became very involved in the long theological or ‘party’ dispute in his home county between the Moderates (to whom Burns adhered) and the more traditionally conservative Popular Party. Arguably, this intellectual hinterland in Burns remains under-appreciated amid a predominant couching of Burns’s iconicity as a ‘folk’ artist.