The Cambridge History of Welsh Literature
Herausgeber: Evans, Geraint; Fulton, Helen
The Cambridge History of Welsh Literature
Herausgeber: Evans, Geraint; Fulton, Helen
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This book is a comprehensive single-volume history of literature in the two major languages of Wales from post-Roman to post-devolution Britain.
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This book is a comprehensive single-volume history of literature in the two major languages of Wales from post-Roman to post-devolution Britain.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 856
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. April 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 50mm
- Gewicht: 1366g
- ISBN-13: 9781107106765
- ISBN-10: 1107106761
- Artikelnr.: 52643971
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 856
- Erscheinungstermin: 18. April 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 50mm
- Gewicht: 1366g
- ISBN-13: 9781107106765
- ISBN-10: 1107106761
- Artikelnr.: 52643971
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
Introduction Geraint Evans and Helen Fulton; Part I. Britain, Wales,
England: 1. Britain, Wales, England, c. 600-1450 Euryn Rhys Roberts; 2.
Britons and Saxons: the earliest writing in Welsh Helen Fulton; 3. Magic
and marvels Mark Williams; 4. Commemorating the past after 1066: tales from
the Mabinogion Diana Luft; 5. Court poetry and historiography before 1282
Catherine McKenna; 6. The aftermath of 1282: Dafydd ap Gwilym and his
contemporaries Dafydd Johnston; 7. Literary networks and patrons in late
medieval Wales Helen Fulton; Part II. After the Acts of Union: 8. The Acts
of Union: culture and religion in Wales, c. 1540-1700 Katharine K. Olson;
9. Welsh humanism after 1536 Angharad Price; 10. Drama and performance in
medieval and early modern Wales David N. Klausner; 11. Tudor London and the
origins of Welsh writing in English Geraint Evans; 12. Bibles and bards in
Tudor and early Stuart Wales Gruffydd Aled Williams; Part III. Revolution
and Industry: 13. Revolution, culture, and industry, c. 1700-1850 Paul
O'Leary; 14. Antiquarianism and Englightenment in the eighteenth century
Mary-Ann Constantine; 15. Romantic Wales and the Eisteddfod Elizabeth
Edwards; 16. Popular poetry, methodism, and the ascendancy of the hymn E.
Wyn James; 17. Travel, translation, and temperance: the origins of the
Welsh novel Katie Gramich; Part IV. The Transition to Modernity: 18. The
modern age, c. 1850-1945 Chris Williams; 19. T. Gwynn Jones and the
renaissance of Welsh poetry Robert Rhys; 20. Industrial fiction Stephen
Knight; 21. From nonconformist nation to proletarian nation: writing Wales,
1885-1930 M. Wynn Thomas; 22. The short story in the twentieth century
Michelle Deininger; 23. Welsh modernist writing in Wales and London Geraint
Evans; 24. The poetry revolution: Dylan Thomas and his circle William
Christie; Part V. The Path to Nationhood in the Late Twentieth Century: 25.
Debating nationhood, c. 1945-2000 Seán Aeron Martin and Mari Elin Wiliam;
26. The legacy of Saunders Lewis Tudur Hallam; 27. R. S. Thomas, Emyr
Humphreys, and the possibility of a bilingual culture Andrew Webb; 28.
Inventing Welsh writing in English Diana Wallace; 29. Exile and diaspora:
Welsh writing outside Wales Melinda Gray; 30. Literary periodicals and the
publishing industry Lisa Sheppard; 31. 'Beyond the Fields We Know': Wales
and fantasy literature Susan Aronstein; 32. Theatre, film, and television
in Wales in the twentieth century Jamie Medhurst; Part VI. After
Devolution: 33. The dragon finds a tongue: devolution and government in
Wales since 1997 Kevin Williams; 34. 'Amlhau Lleisiau'n Llên': birth and
rebirth in Welsh-language literature, 1990-2014 Ll¿r Gwyn Lewis; 35.
Writing the size of Wales Alice Entwistle; Afterword Geraint Evans and
Helen Fulton.
England: 1. Britain, Wales, England, c. 600-1450 Euryn Rhys Roberts; 2.
Britons and Saxons: the earliest writing in Welsh Helen Fulton; 3. Magic
and marvels Mark Williams; 4. Commemorating the past after 1066: tales from
the Mabinogion Diana Luft; 5. Court poetry and historiography before 1282
Catherine McKenna; 6. The aftermath of 1282: Dafydd ap Gwilym and his
contemporaries Dafydd Johnston; 7. Literary networks and patrons in late
medieval Wales Helen Fulton; Part II. After the Acts of Union: 8. The Acts
of Union: culture and religion in Wales, c. 1540-1700 Katharine K. Olson;
9. Welsh humanism after 1536 Angharad Price; 10. Drama and performance in
medieval and early modern Wales David N. Klausner; 11. Tudor London and the
origins of Welsh writing in English Geraint Evans; 12. Bibles and bards in
Tudor and early Stuart Wales Gruffydd Aled Williams; Part III. Revolution
and Industry: 13. Revolution, culture, and industry, c. 1700-1850 Paul
O'Leary; 14. Antiquarianism and Englightenment in the eighteenth century
Mary-Ann Constantine; 15. Romantic Wales and the Eisteddfod Elizabeth
Edwards; 16. Popular poetry, methodism, and the ascendancy of the hymn E.
Wyn James; 17. Travel, translation, and temperance: the origins of the
Welsh novel Katie Gramich; Part IV. The Transition to Modernity: 18. The
modern age, c. 1850-1945 Chris Williams; 19. T. Gwynn Jones and the
renaissance of Welsh poetry Robert Rhys; 20. Industrial fiction Stephen
Knight; 21. From nonconformist nation to proletarian nation: writing Wales,
1885-1930 M. Wynn Thomas; 22. The short story in the twentieth century
Michelle Deininger; 23. Welsh modernist writing in Wales and London Geraint
Evans; 24. The poetry revolution: Dylan Thomas and his circle William
Christie; Part V. The Path to Nationhood in the Late Twentieth Century: 25.
Debating nationhood, c. 1945-2000 Seán Aeron Martin and Mari Elin Wiliam;
26. The legacy of Saunders Lewis Tudur Hallam; 27. R. S. Thomas, Emyr
Humphreys, and the possibility of a bilingual culture Andrew Webb; 28.
Inventing Welsh writing in English Diana Wallace; 29. Exile and diaspora:
Welsh writing outside Wales Melinda Gray; 30. Literary periodicals and the
publishing industry Lisa Sheppard; 31. 'Beyond the Fields We Know': Wales
and fantasy literature Susan Aronstein; 32. Theatre, film, and television
in Wales in the twentieth century Jamie Medhurst; Part VI. After
Devolution: 33. The dragon finds a tongue: devolution and government in
Wales since 1997 Kevin Williams; 34. 'Amlhau Lleisiau'n Llên': birth and
rebirth in Welsh-language literature, 1990-2014 Ll¿r Gwyn Lewis; 35.
Writing the size of Wales Alice Entwistle; Afterword Geraint Evans and
Helen Fulton.
Introduction Geraint Evans and Helen Fulton; Part I. Britain, Wales,
England: 1. Britain, Wales, England, c. 600-1450 Euryn Rhys Roberts; 2.
Britons and Saxons: the earliest writing in Welsh Helen Fulton; 3. Magic
and marvels Mark Williams; 4. Commemorating the past after 1066: tales from
the Mabinogion Diana Luft; 5. Court poetry and historiography before 1282
Catherine McKenna; 6. The aftermath of 1282: Dafydd ap Gwilym and his
contemporaries Dafydd Johnston; 7. Literary networks and patrons in late
medieval Wales Helen Fulton; Part II. After the Acts of Union: 8. The Acts
of Union: culture and religion in Wales, c. 1540-1700 Katharine K. Olson;
9. Welsh humanism after 1536 Angharad Price; 10. Drama and performance in
medieval and early modern Wales David N. Klausner; 11. Tudor London and the
origins of Welsh writing in English Geraint Evans; 12. Bibles and bards in
Tudor and early Stuart Wales Gruffydd Aled Williams; Part III. Revolution
and Industry: 13. Revolution, culture, and industry, c. 1700-1850 Paul
O'Leary; 14. Antiquarianism and Englightenment in the eighteenth century
Mary-Ann Constantine; 15. Romantic Wales and the Eisteddfod Elizabeth
Edwards; 16. Popular poetry, methodism, and the ascendancy of the hymn E.
Wyn James; 17. Travel, translation, and temperance: the origins of the
Welsh novel Katie Gramich; Part IV. The Transition to Modernity: 18. The
modern age, c. 1850-1945 Chris Williams; 19. T. Gwynn Jones and the
renaissance of Welsh poetry Robert Rhys; 20. Industrial fiction Stephen
Knight; 21. From nonconformist nation to proletarian nation: writing Wales,
1885-1930 M. Wynn Thomas; 22. The short story in the twentieth century
Michelle Deininger; 23. Welsh modernist writing in Wales and London Geraint
Evans; 24. The poetry revolution: Dylan Thomas and his circle William
Christie; Part V. The Path to Nationhood in the Late Twentieth Century: 25.
Debating nationhood, c. 1945-2000 Seán Aeron Martin and Mari Elin Wiliam;
26. The legacy of Saunders Lewis Tudur Hallam; 27. R. S. Thomas, Emyr
Humphreys, and the possibility of a bilingual culture Andrew Webb; 28.
Inventing Welsh writing in English Diana Wallace; 29. Exile and diaspora:
Welsh writing outside Wales Melinda Gray; 30. Literary periodicals and the
publishing industry Lisa Sheppard; 31. 'Beyond the Fields We Know': Wales
and fantasy literature Susan Aronstein; 32. Theatre, film, and television
in Wales in the twentieth century Jamie Medhurst; Part VI. After
Devolution: 33. The dragon finds a tongue: devolution and government in
Wales since 1997 Kevin Williams; 34. 'Amlhau Lleisiau'n Llên': birth and
rebirth in Welsh-language literature, 1990-2014 Ll¿r Gwyn Lewis; 35.
Writing the size of Wales Alice Entwistle; Afterword Geraint Evans and
Helen Fulton.
England: 1. Britain, Wales, England, c. 600-1450 Euryn Rhys Roberts; 2.
Britons and Saxons: the earliest writing in Welsh Helen Fulton; 3. Magic
and marvels Mark Williams; 4. Commemorating the past after 1066: tales from
the Mabinogion Diana Luft; 5. Court poetry and historiography before 1282
Catherine McKenna; 6. The aftermath of 1282: Dafydd ap Gwilym and his
contemporaries Dafydd Johnston; 7. Literary networks and patrons in late
medieval Wales Helen Fulton; Part II. After the Acts of Union: 8. The Acts
of Union: culture and religion in Wales, c. 1540-1700 Katharine K. Olson;
9. Welsh humanism after 1536 Angharad Price; 10. Drama and performance in
medieval and early modern Wales David N. Klausner; 11. Tudor London and the
origins of Welsh writing in English Geraint Evans; 12. Bibles and bards in
Tudor and early Stuart Wales Gruffydd Aled Williams; Part III. Revolution
and Industry: 13. Revolution, culture, and industry, c. 1700-1850 Paul
O'Leary; 14. Antiquarianism and Englightenment in the eighteenth century
Mary-Ann Constantine; 15. Romantic Wales and the Eisteddfod Elizabeth
Edwards; 16. Popular poetry, methodism, and the ascendancy of the hymn E.
Wyn James; 17. Travel, translation, and temperance: the origins of the
Welsh novel Katie Gramich; Part IV. The Transition to Modernity: 18. The
modern age, c. 1850-1945 Chris Williams; 19. T. Gwynn Jones and the
renaissance of Welsh poetry Robert Rhys; 20. Industrial fiction Stephen
Knight; 21. From nonconformist nation to proletarian nation: writing Wales,
1885-1930 M. Wynn Thomas; 22. The short story in the twentieth century
Michelle Deininger; 23. Welsh modernist writing in Wales and London Geraint
Evans; 24. The poetry revolution: Dylan Thomas and his circle William
Christie; Part V. The Path to Nationhood in the Late Twentieth Century: 25.
Debating nationhood, c. 1945-2000 Seán Aeron Martin and Mari Elin Wiliam;
26. The legacy of Saunders Lewis Tudur Hallam; 27. R. S. Thomas, Emyr
Humphreys, and the possibility of a bilingual culture Andrew Webb; 28.
Inventing Welsh writing in English Diana Wallace; 29. Exile and diaspora:
Welsh writing outside Wales Melinda Gray; 30. Literary periodicals and the
publishing industry Lisa Sheppard; 31. 'Beyond the Fields We Know': Wales
and fantasy literature Susan Aronstein; 32. Theatre, film, and television
in Wales in the twentieth century Jamie Medhurst; Part VI. After
Devolution: 33. The dragon finds a tongue: devolution and government in
Wales since 1997 Kevin Williams; 34. 'Amlhau Lleisiau'n Llên': birth and
rebirth in Welsh-language literature, 1990-2014 Ll¿r Gwyn Lewis; 35.
Writing the size of Wales Alice Entwistle; Afterword Geraint Evans and
Helen Fulton.