The Association for Scottish Literary Studies is a Scottish educational charity, founded in 1970 to promote and support the teaching, study and writing of Scottish literature. Its founding members included the Scottish literary scholar Matthew McDiarmid. Originally based at the University of Aberdeen, it moved to its current home within the University of Glasgow in 1996. In November 2015, ASLS was allocated £40,000 by the Scottish Government to support its work providing teacher training and classroom resources for schools. ASLS's main field of activity is publishing, and the organisation is a member of Publishing Scotland.
Publications
Periodicals
ASLS produces periodicals, including Scottish Literary Review, a peer reviewed journal of Scottish literature and cultural studies; Scottish Language, a peer reviewed journal of Scottish languages and linguistics; The International Journal of Scottish Literature, a free online peer reviewed journal ; and The Bottle Imp, a free online ezine. Since June 2013, Scottish Literary Review has been included in Project MUSE's Premium Collection of journals.
Books
Annual Volumes
Since 1971 ASLS has republished a number of out of print Scottish texts in their Annual Volumes series. Titles in the series include reprints of 18th- and 19th-century fiction, anthologies of Scottish drama, editions of poetry and collections of other writings. Two ASLS Annual Volumes have won Saltire SocietyResearch Book of the Year awards: The Poems of William Dunbar, edited by Priscilla Bawcutt, and Sorley MacLean's Dàin do Eimhir, edited by Christopher Whyte.
The ASLS Occasional Papers series publishes essays and monographs on Scottish literary and linguistic topics, often based on papers presented at ASLS conferences. The most recent edition in this series, number 22, is entitled Empires and Revolutions: Cunninghame Graham and His Contemporaries.
Scotnotes
ASLS publishes the Scotnotes series of study guides to Scottish writers and their literary works. There are currently thirty-nine titles in this series, on authors ranging from late medieval poets such as William Dunbar and Robert Henryson to contemporary writers such as Iain Banks, Liz Lochhead and Ian Rankin.
Other titles
In May 2010, in partnership with the Loch Lomond and The Trossachs National Park, ASLS published an illustrated edition of Sir Walter Scott's narrative poem The Lady of the Lake, to mark the 200th anniversary of the original publication. In June 2011, with financial support from the Gaelic Books Council, ASLS published a new edition of Sorley MacLean's An Cuilithionn/The Cuillin. In February 2013, ASLS hosted the inaugural Dr Gavin Wallace Fellowship, set up by Creative Scotland "to enable a writer to take time out of their usual environment to embark upon a year-long literary adventure to develop their practice". Kirsty Logan was selected to be the first recipient of the Fellowship, and on 10 August 2015 ASLS published her collection of short storiesA Portable Shelter.
A number of literary scholars have held the presidency of the ASLS:
John MacQueen
Tom Dunn
Alexander Scott
David Daiches
Tom Crawford
Maurice Lindsay
John Blackburn
David Robb
Dorothy McMillan
Alan MacGillivray
Alan Riach
Ian Brown
Alison Lumsden
David Goldie
Awards
To date, two ASLS Annual Volumes have won Saltire Society Research Book of the Year awards: The Poems of William Dunbar, edited by Priscilla Bawcutt ; and Sorley MacLean's Dàin do Eimhir, edited by Christopher Whyte. In 2011, the ASLS's edition of Sorley MacLean's An Cuilithionn/The Cuillin was shortlisted for the Saltire Society Scottish Book of the Year award. Also in 2011, along with VisitScotland and the University of Glasgow, the ASLS co-produced Literary Scotland: A Traveller's Guide. In October 2011, this publication won the Chartered Institute of Public Relations Scotland Gold Award for Best Publication.