Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Ivanhoe, Sir Walter Scott - Chris R. Vanden Bossche (essay date 1987)
Ivanhoe, Sir Walter Scott - Chris R. Vanden Bossche (essay date 1987)
Chris R. Vanden Bossche (essay date 1987)
SOURCE: "Culture and Economy in Ivanhoe," in Nineteenth-Century Literature, Vol. 42, No. 1, June, 1987, pp. 46-72.
[In the following essay, Bossche claims that Ivanhoe, as a work of historical fiction, attempts to bridge the distance between past and present by mingling elements of an earlier culture with more familiar political and social issues.]
Sir Walter Scott's Ivanhoe dramatizes culture as a semiotic system that constitutes social relations. The novel's protagonists are not just Cedric, Wilfred, Bois-Guilbert, and Isaac of York, but the languages they speak: Saxon, the lingua franca, Norman, and Hebrew. The theme of language that permeates Ivanhoe is a metaphor for culture, and the novel represents many other semiotic systems, including the cultural codes of etiquette, costume, architecture, cuisine, and economy. The desire to return to cultural and...
[The entire page is 10385 words long]
Join eNotes
Over 3,500 study guides, question and answer forums, literature criticism, reference content, and much more!
Navigate
- Introduction
-
Criticism
- Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine (essay date 1819)
- The Eclectic Review (essay date 1820)
- Walter Scott (essay date 1830)
- G. H. Maynadier (essay date 1926)
- John Buchan (essay date 1932)
- H. J. C. Grierson (essay date 1953)
- Joseph E. Duncan (essay date 1955)
- Francis R. Hart (essay date 1966)
- Edgar Johnson (essay date 1970)
- Alice Chandler (essay date 1975)
- Kenneth M. Sroka (essay date 1979)
- Judith Wilt (essay date 1985)
- Chris R. Vanden Bossche (essay date 1987)
- Jerome Mitchell (essay date 1987)
- Lionel Lackey (essay date 1992)
- Michael Ragussis (essay date 1993)
- John Sutherland (essay date 1995)
- Further Reading
- Copyright
