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Walford Davies
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 222

Walford Davies

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1942
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Docklands
  • Language: en

Docklands

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2019
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  • Publisher: Seren

In Damian Walford Davies's compellingly eerie new poetry collection, Docklands - A Ghost Story, a louche architect is haunted by the ghost of a young girl through the booming docklands of Victorian Cardiff and the bourgeois drawing rooms of the expanding city.

Walford Davies
  • Language: en

Walford Davies

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1937
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

Autographed photograph England Sir Henry Walford Davies KCVO OBE (6 September 1869 - 11 March 1941) was a British composer, who held the title Master of the King's Musick from 1934 until 1941.

Roald Dahl
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 210

Roald Dahl

Published to mark the centenary of Roald Dahl’s (Welsh) birth, Roald Dahl: Wales of the Unexpected breaks new ground by revealing the place of Wales in the imagination of the writer known as ‘the world’s number one storyteller’. Exploring the complex conditioning presence of Wales in his life and work, the essays in this collection dramatically defamiliarise Dahl and in the process render him uncanny. Importantly, Dahl is encountered whole – his books for children and his fiction for adults are read as mutually invigorating bodies of work, both of which evidence the ways in which Wales, and the author’s Anglo-Welsh orientation, demand articulation throughout the career. Recognisi...

Cartographies of Culture
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 366

Cartographies of Culture

Cartographies of Culture: New Geographies of Welsh Writing in English offers a pioneering new examination of the links between maps and imaginative writing. Concerned to draw literary studies and geography into a fruitful dialogue, the book offers a genuinely interdisciplinary study of literary texts in relation to the spatialities of culture. Taking the anglophone literature of Wales as its main ‘data field’, the book offers a boldly imaginative and stringently theorised analysis of five literary ‘maps’. What emerges is nothing less than a new way of reading literature through, and as, maps.

Music for Wales
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 199

Music for Wales

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 1992
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  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Megalith
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 128

Megalith

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2006
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  • Publisher: Gomer Press

Both ancient and urgent, baffling and strangely familiar, megaliths are resonant presences in the landscapes. In this book, 11 well-known writers offer compelling engagements with 11 megalithic sites in Britain and Ireland. These essays lyrically animate cold stone and map dramatic emotional terrain.

Witch
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 124

Witch

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2012-05-11
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  • Publisher: Seren

With the narrative pull of a novel and the vibrancy of a play for voices, Damian Walford Davies's Witch offers a thrilling portrait of a Suffolk village in the throes of the witchcraft hunts of the mid-seventeenth century. The poems in this collection are dark spells, compact and moving: seven sections, each of seven poems, each of seven couplets, are delivered by those most closely involved in the 'making' of a witch. The speakers - from Thomas Love the priest, the villagers who slowly succumb to suspicion and counter-accusation, the 'discoverer of witches' Francis Hurst, and the 'witch' herself - authentically conjure a war-torn society in which religious paranoia amplifies local grievances to fever pitch. Witch is a damning parable that chimes with the terror and anxieties of our own haunted age.

Romantic Cartographies
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 351

Romantic Cartographies

  • Categories: Art

An innovative, interdisciplinary study of cartography as a significant multifaceted cultural practice in Romantic period culture.

Jerusalem
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 262

Jerusalem

The stanzas beginning, 'And did those feet' are among the most famous works written by the Romantic poet and artist, William Blake. Set to music by Hubert Parry in 1916 and renamed, 'Jerusalem', this hymn has become an emblem of Englishness in the past century, and is regularly invoked at sporting events, public and private ceremonies, and, of course, as part of Last Night of the Proms. Yet when Blake first engraved his lines in his epic work, Milton a Poem, he had been tried for sedition. Likewise, although Parry was commissioned to compose his music as part of the war effort by the organization Fight for Right, he soon removed permission for that group to perform his hymn and instead gave ...