Background to Dylan Thomas, and other explorations

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Background to Dylan Thomas, and other explorations

Gwyn Jones

Oxford University Press, 1992

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

These twelve essays and addresses range widely from consideration of the nature of Anglo-Welsh literature to incisive commentary on critical approaches to the European novel. Authors such as Dylan Thomas, Richard Savage, and Caradoc Evans (the "best-hated Welshman of them all") come under Jones's sympathetic scrutiny; there is incisive analysis of the Heroic poetry of the Welsh, Norse, and English peoples. Here too are some reflections on Viking themes, an area in which Gwyn Jones has established a worldwide reputation. Jones's critical insights and literary judgments are constantly enlivened by his genial personality and a gift for vivid description, expressed in prose that is both thoughtful and nonchalant. These explorations are the witty and lively writings of a man whose heart is in Wales, but whose head allows him to range freely across the wider world.

Table of Contents

  • Background to Dylan Thomas - Anglo-Welsh literature, a personal view
  • the Golden Cockerel Mabinogion, 1944-1948
  • three poetical prayer-makers of the island of Britain
  • a mighty man in Sion - Carodoc Evans, 1878-1945
  • Welsh Dylan, 1914-1953, an obituary
  • son of the late Earl Rivers - Richard Savage, 1687-1743
  • on first planting a library
  • the novel and society
  • here be dragons - a view of the nature and function of heroic poetry
  • the legendary history of Olaf Tryggvason
  • the Viking world
  • address to my friends, 24 May 1987.

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