A Hundred Years of Fiction
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Description
After the second world war, as section three describes, writers increasingly wrote about a Wales that sought self-sufficiency, and many of them, often Welsh-speaking like Emyr Humphreys, Menna Gallie, and Christopher Meredith, sought to integrate some of the native traditions with the English language culture in which they wrote. At the end of the twentieth century there is a surge of Welsh writers in English, often now published in Wales, women’s voices strong among them, who are aware both of the difficult circumstances in which they live and of their status as writers contributing to the self-awareness of an increasingly independent-minded country.
Introduction
Section 1: First Contact and Romance1.1 Colonial Contexts
1.2 First-Contact Tales and Romances
1.3 From Romance towards Ethnography: Amy Dillwyn and Allen Raine
1.4 The Romance of Industry: Joseph Keating
1.5 Rural Anti-Romance: Caradoc Evans
1.6 The Romance of Powys: Geraint Goodwin, Hilda Vaughan and Margiad Evans