George Ross Roy (20 April 1924 – 19 February 2013) was a Canadian scholar who specialized in Scottish literature, best known as editor of the long-standard edition of The Letters of Robert Burns, 2 vols. (1985), as a collector of Burns books and manuscripts, and as founder and for nearly 50 years sole editor of the journal Studies in Scottish Literature, the first refereed academic journal in the field.[1]
As a boy, Ross had visited Scotland and been introduced to the writings of the Scottish poet Robert Burns (1759-1796) by his grandfather, W. Ormiston Roy, an avid Burns and Whitman collector. When in college he lived with his grandfather and further developed his literary interests.[4] Ross Roy's early scholarship was in comparative literature, on the French reception of Walt Whitman, and his first books were on Canadian poetry. His first published articles on Burns concerned the French reception and translation of Burns's poetry, but from the mid-1960s onwards, aside from his editorial work, almost all his scholarship related to Burns. His major achievement, over twenty-five years in the making, was a full revision of the collected Letters of Robert Burns, published by Clarendon Press in 1985, which recollated previously known letters against manuscript, expanded some letters that had previously been published in incomplete texts, and added some thirty additional letters. A second notable contribution was his full description and dating in 1965 of the first edition of Burns's collection The Merry Muses of Caledonia (1799), and his editing of the first facsimile of the 1799 edition for the University of South Carolina Press in 1999. A volume of his selected essays about Burns was published in 2018, and a full list of his publications was included in the festschrift presented to him in 2012 (a list of addenda through 2015 was included in his Selected Essays, 2018). For his contributions to Burns studies, he was elected in 1987 as an honorary president of the Robert Burns World Federation.[5] He was also elected an honorary member (only the third since 1896) of the Burns Club of Atlanta.
Burns collection
As an undergraduate in the late 1940s, Ross Roy had helped his grandfather acquire books for his Robert Burns collection, and on his grandfather's death in 1959, he inherited the collection, then comprising some 1500 volumes. Selling his own Canadian literature collection, buying a copy of the most costly Burns volume (the Kilmarnock edition), and aggressively pursuing manuscripts and books on both sides of the Atlantic,[6] he built a collection encompassing Scottish poetry since 1707 that by 1989 totaled some 15000 volumes, with over 5000 volumes of Burns.[7] In 1989, shortly before he was due to retire, he and his wife transferred as gift-purchase the G. Ross Roy Collection to the University of South Carolina Libraries, and he made additional transfers and donations each year thereafter, most notably a collection of Burns manuscripts in 2007. An illustrated catalogue of the Burns portion of the collection was published for the Burns 250th anniversary in 2009.[8] By 2008, it was being referred to as "the largest collection of Scottish poetry outside Scotland."[9]
Studies in Scottish Literature
When Ross Roy first became interested in Scottish literature, there was no refereed scholarly journal specific to the field. In 1962, he decided to start one himself, and the first number of Studies in Scottish Literature appeared in July 1963. The journal, he wrote, was to provide "a common meeting ground for work embracing all aspects of the great Scottish literary heritage. It is not the organ of any school or faction; it welcomes all shades of opinion.... As a journal devoted to a vigorous living literature it will carry studies of contemporary authors."[10] He planned it as an international venture, recruiting for its first advisory board three major figures, the Scottish poet Hugh MacDiarmid, the veteran American scholar A.L. Strout, and the German scholar Kurt Wittig, soon to be joined by the leading Scottish critic David Daiches. Over the next five decades, first as a quarterly, and then from 1978 as an annual volume, it published essays not only by established scholars and critics, but also published first or early articles by many of those who later became influential in the field. Several scholars have suggested that the journal made possible the later institutional development of Scottish literature as an academic discipline.[11] Following a spectacular double-volume in 2007, Roy, by then well over 80, announced that the journal would close down, but in 2012 he transferred rights to the University of South Carolina libraries for it to continue; in 2012, Studies in Scottish Literature restarted, adding an open-access digital version alongside print production, and by 2013 all back issues were also available online.
Selected works
The City: A Prose Poem (Strasbourg: Imprimerie Regionale, 1956)
ed., Twelve Modern French-Canadian Poets (Toronto: Ryerson, 1958)
Le Sentiment de la Nature dans la Poesie Canadienne Anglaise 1867-1918 (Paris: Nizet, 1961)
ed., Studies in Scottish Literature, 36 vols. (1963-2007)
Since 2010 there has been an annual G. Ross Roy Medal awarded for the best PhD dissertation on a Scottish topic, presented at the Saltire Society's annual Literary Awards in Edinburgh.[12] Also in 2010, a conference room in Hollings Library, University of South Carolina, displaying Burns portraits and memorabilia, was named at the request of the donors as "The Roy-Scott Room": a portrait of Ross Roy by Alasdair Gray was added in 2018.[13] In 2013, the Ayrshire Association of Burns Clubs renamed their annual Burns quiz competition the Ross Roy Memorial Shield.[14]
Festschrift
Patrick Scott; Kenneth Simpson, eds. (2012). Robert Burns and friends essays by W. Ormiston Roy Fellows presented to G. Ross Roy. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Libraries. pp. 162–180. ISBN9781439270974.
^Elizabeth A. Sudduth, with the assistance of Clayton Tarr, The G. Ross Roy Collection, An Illustrated Catalogue (Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 2009).
^Jim Gilchrist,"The Chairman of the Bard," The Scotsman (1 November 2008); reprinted Robert Burns Lives! 94 (August 2010).
^G. Ross Roy, "Editorial," Studies in Scottish Literature, I:1 (July 1963), p. 3.