The Fleming Foundation Cultural Commentary

1

The Master Builder

The London theatre-goer has to get used to seeing what he reveres systematically demeaned. Such a thought occurred to me as I watched ‘My Master Builder’, a play very loosely based on Ibsen’s striking late work The Master Builder.

2

Walter Scott: Ivanhoe, Part I

Sir Walter Scott’s Ivanhoe, published in 1818, took Britain by storm.  As he explains in the preface he wrote for a later edition, he had begun to realize that the reading public, after enjoying nine Scottish novels in four years, was beginning to typecast the unknown “author of Waverley” as a Scottish localist

10

The Trump Dilemma

The MAGA coalition, if we can believe the media, is about to explode into antagonistic fragments.  While many Trump voters are still loyal, others, following the lead of his would-be successors, are in rebellion.  The cause of the rebellion is indicative of what is wrong with the entire movement.

1

Scott’s Scottish Nationalism

One important service Scott rendered his own people was the recovery of the Highlands as part of Scotland.  Before Sir Walter, many Lowland Scots had shared the English view of the highlanders as brigands who periodically swept down from the hills to steal everything not nailed down.  This was not an entirely false conception, as Scott freely acknowledged,