Scotsoun

Scotsoun is an audio archive of works of Scottish literature, mainly of poetry in the Scots language.

The recordings were created over a period of thirty years by George Philp and Allan Ramsay and feature the voices of present poets in the language, such as William Neill, as well as audio readings, by poets and scholars, of a wide range of canonical texts, including extracts from Barbour and work of makars such as Henryson and Dunbar.

The archive is currently managed by the Scots Language Society.[1][2]

Notes

gollark: And would a degree program in electric cars - before anyone knew about what they'd be like - have actually been helpful?
gollark: Oh, true, I misread slightly.
gollark: No it doesn't. Having a degree in something doesn't actually mean you control it.
gollark: It's also probably silly to do a very specific degree like that in our rapidly changing world.
gollark: Since space mining is not yet an extant industry, that would be silly.
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