SE2448: Modern Welsh Writing in English

School English Literature
Department Code ENCAP
Module Code SE2448
External Subject Code 100319
Number of Credits 20
Level L6
Language of Delivery English
Module Leader Professor Katie Gramich
Semester Double Semester
Academic Year 2013/4

Outline Description of Module

This module seeks to introduce students to a range of literary texts written in English by Welsh authors in the twentieth century. It offers the opportunity to build on work done in the Year 1 module ‘Literature, Culture, and Place’, providing a thought-provoking, complementary account of writing from the British Isles to set beside students’ knowledge of English and American literature of the same period. The range of set texts, encompassing both fiction and poetry, will be studied in their cultural, historical, and literary contexts. Authors studied include well-known names such as Dylan Thomas and Gillian Clarke, alongside less well-known but fascinating and accessible writers such as Gwyn Thomas and Dorothy Edwards. Students will engage with such questions as national identity and belonging, language, gender, place, class, ethnicity, migration, and social change, as well as paying close critical attention to the literary and stylistic aspects of the set texts. Relevant theoretical perspectives will also be explored, including some of the seminal work of the Welsh cultural critic, Raymond Williams.

On completion of the module a student should be able to

demonstrate a thorough understanding of the set texts and an awareness of their cultural and historical contexts; display a knowledge of the development of Welsh writing in English during the twentieth century; discuss the major themes and concerns of modern Anglophone Welsh writing.

How the module will be delivered

This module will extend over both semesters. Timetabled sessions comprise a weekly lecture and a fortnightly seminar. The lectures will introduce and contextualize modern Anglophone Welsh literature and provide students with an overview of the field, as well as an introduction to the life and work of individual writers. In the seminars, students are expected to be prepared to participate in discussion of the set texts. Lectures are usually supplemented with handouts, which are also normally made available to students on Learning Central. Audio is used occasionally in this module, as well as Powerpoint.

Skills that will be practised and developed

This module will enable students to practise and improve their critical writing, as well as their skills of oral communication. Its subject-specific content will contribute to their awareness and understanding of cultural and linguistic difference, and may be particularly relevant for students later seeking employment in Wales. The written and oral practice will enhance students’ awareness of register and will help to improve skills in building an argument.

 

How the module will be assessed

HOW THE MODULE WILL BE ASSESSED:

The module is assessed by means of two pieces of written work of equal length and weighting. The first essay will focus on fiction, and the second on poetry. Students will have had an opportunity to submit unassessed, formative pieces in preparation for this assessed work.

 

Type of assessment

Title

Duration (exam) /

Word length (essay)

Approx. date of assessment

Essay

50%

 

1,600 words

January

Essay

50%

 

1,600 words

May

 

This module is assessed according to the Marking Criteria set out in the English Literature Course Guide. There are otherwise no academic or competence standards which limit the availability of adjustments or alternative assessments for students with disabilities.

 

Assessment Breakdown

Type % Title Duration(hrs)
Written Assessment 50 Essay 1 N/A
Written Assessment 50 Essay 2 N/A

Syllabus content

SYLLABUS CONTENT:

 

Semester One: Welsh Fiction in English

Week 1 Fathers and Mothers of Welsh Fiction in English

Week 2 The Short Story in Wales

Week 3 Borders, Gender and nationhood

Week 4 Writing the Industrial Experience

Week 5 Dismantling the industrial experience

Week 6 READING WEEK

Week 7 Form, Language and Style

Week 8 Contemporary women writers and the ‘Land of My Fathers’

Week 9 Fiction, Place, and Politics

Week 10 Changing Wales: the contemporary novel

Week 11 Conclusion and essay advice

 

Semester Two: Welsh Poetry in English

Week 1 Introduction: Overview of the history of Welsh poetry in English; ‘seepage’ between the Welsh language tradition and English-language poetry.

Week 2 Poetry of Place and belonging: Glyn Jones, Idris Davies, Christine Evans, Ruth Bidgood, R. S. Thomas.

Week 3 Poetry and the Languages of Wales: R. S. Thomas, Gillian Clarke, Gwyneth Lewis, Stephen Knight, Mike Jenkins.

Week 4 Poetry and Women’s Lives: W H Davies, Gillian Clarke, Deryn Rees-Jones, Pascale Petit, Jean Earle, Christopher Meredith.

Week 5 The Elegiac mode in Welsh Poetry: Dylan Thomas, Alun Lewis, Gillian Clarke, Tony Conran.

READING WEEK

Week 7 The Satirical mode in Welsh Poetry: Harri Webb, R S Thomas, Nigel Jenkins, Peter Finch, Oliver Reynolds.

Week 8 Poetry and the Natural World: Dylan Thomas, R. S. Thomas, Catherine Fisher, Robert Minhinnick.

Week 9 When Was Wales?: Poetry and History: Raymond Garlick, Christine Evans, Emyr Humphreys, Sally Roberts Jones, Christopher Meredith.

Week 10 Love Poetry: Alun Lewis, R. S. Thomas, Dannie Abse, Ifor Thomas.

Week 11 Dialogues with Tradition: Bryn Griffiths, Gillian Clarke, Anne Cluysenaar, David Jones, Jeremy Hooker.

The main readings for this module are contained in a published anthology of poems and in the set novels and short stories. Secondary reading includes books and journal articles, some of which are available online. Students should contact the module leader as early as possible if they will require readings in an alternative format. 

Essential Reading and Resource List

INDICATIVE READING AND RESOURCE LIST:

Primary texts in semester one are likely to vary from year to year.

The short stories studied will normally be provided as photocopies; students are expected to acquire their own copies of the novels and the poetry anthology.

 

Semester One set texts:

‘Allen Raine’, ‘Home Sweet Home’ (short story, 1908)

Caradoc Evans, stories from My People (Bridgend: Seren, 1987 [original ed. 1915])

Dorothy Edwards, ‘The Conquered’ (short story, 1927)

Rhys Davies, ‘Blodwen’ (short story, 1931)

Margiad Evans, Country Dance (Cardigan: Parthian, 2005 [original ed. 1932])

B.L. Coombes ‘Twenty Tons of Coal’ (short story, 1937)

Gwyn Thomas, ‘Oscar’ (novella, 1946)

Menna Gallie, The Small Mine (Dinas Powys: Honno, 2000 [original ed. 1962]) 

Siân James, ‘Happy as Saturday Night’(short story, 1990s)

Clare Morgan, ‘Losing’ (short story, 1990s)

Chris Meredith, Shifts, (Bridgend: Seren, 1997 [original ed. 1988])

Cynan Jones, The Long Dry (Cardigan: Parthian, 2006)

 

Semester Two set text:

Stephens, Meic (ed.) Poetry 1900-2000 (Library of Wales Series), Cardigan: Parthian, 2007 ISBN: 978-1-902638-88-

Indicative Secondary sources

Aaron, Jane, et al. ed., Our Sisters' Land : The Changing Identity of Women in Wales, (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1994)

Bohata, Kirsti Postcolonialism Revisited (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2004)

Conran, Tony, Frontiers in Anglo-Welsh Poetry (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1997)

Davies, Damian Walford, Cartographies of Culture: New Geographies of Welsh Writing in English (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2012)

Davies, Diane, ‘Anglo-Welshness: the semantics of hyphenation’, in Keith Cameron, ed., The Nation: Myth or Reality? (London: Intellect Books, 1994) pp. 23-9.

Garlick, Raymond, An Introduction to Anglo-Welsh Literature (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1970)

Gramich, Katie, ‘Cymru or Wales?: Explorations in a Divided Sensibility’ in Studying British Cultures ed. Susan Bassnett, (London: Routledge, 1997)

Gramich, Katie, Twentieth-Century Women’s Writing in Wales: Land, Gender, Belonging (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2008)

Gramich, Katie, ed., Mapping the Territory: Critical Approaches to Welsh Fiction in English (Cardigan: Parthian, 2010)

Gregson, Ian, The New Poetry in Wales (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2007)

Harris, John, A Bibliographical Guide to Twenty-Four Modern Anglo-Welsh Writers, (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1994)

Hooker, Jeremy, Imagining Wales: A View of Modern Welsh Writing in English (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2001)

Humphreys, Emyr, The Taliesin Tradition, (London: Black Raven Press, 1983)

Jarvis, Matthew, Welsh Environments in Contemporary Poetry, (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2008)

Jones, Glyn, The Dragon has Two Tongues, (London: Dent, 1968; reprint Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2001)

Jones, Gwyn, The First Forty Years: Some Notes on Anglo-Welsh Literature, (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1957)

Lloyd, David, ed., The Urgency of Identity: Contemporary English-Language Poetry from Wales (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1994)

Mathias, Roland,  A Ride Through the Wood: Essays on Anglo-Welsh Literature, (Bridgend: Poetry Wales Press, 1985)

Mathias, Roland,Anglo-Welsh Literature: An Illustrated History, (Bridgend: Poetry Wales Press, 1986)

Stephens, Meic, ed., The New Companion to the Literature of Wales, (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1998)

Thomas, M. Wynn, ed., Welsh Writing in English, (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2003)

Thomas, M. Wynn, In the Shadow of the Pulpit: Literature and Nonconformist Wales (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2010)

Thomas, Ned, The Welsh Extremist: Modern Welsh Politics, Literature and Society, original ed. 1971, reprint with additional chapter, (Talybont: Y Lolfa, 1991)

Williams, Daniel, ed., Slanderoustongues: Essays on Welsh poetry in English 1970-2005 (Bridgend: Seren, 2010)

Williams, Raymond, Who Speaks for Wales?: Nation, Culture, Identity , ed. Daniel Williams (Cardiff : University of Wales Press, 2006)


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