Scott's Waverley (1814), set in and around the Jacobite Rising in the
Scotland of 1745-6, was the first historical novel in world literature.
Innovative and humane in its plot, rich in social detail, and truly
international in popularity, it not only launched a genre, but also
became a landmark in literary realism, in historiography and in
bookselling. In this study, Richard Humphrey traces and accounts for the
text's impact on historical fiction and shows its originality in
tackling the manifold issues of rebellion and warfare, separatism and
union, prejudice and cultural tolerance. He sets Waverley in its social
and literary context, provides detailed analysis of key portions of the
text, and offers guidance on further reading.