New Territories in Modernism: Anglophone Welsh Writing, 1930-1949
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Until very recently, Welsh literary Modernism has been critically neglected, both within and outside Wales. This is the first book devoted solely to the study of Welsh literary Modernism, revealing and examining eight key Anglophone Welsh writers. Laura Wainwright demonstrates how their linguistic experimentation constituted an engagement with the unprecedented linguistic, social and cultural changes that were the making of modern Wales, and formed the crucible for the emergence of a distinct Welsh Modernism. This study of Welsh Modernism challenges conventional literary histories and, in more than one sense, takes Modernism and Modernist studies into new territories.
Laura Wainwright
Laura Wainwright is an independent academic and writer. She completed her PhD in English Literature at Cardiff University, and has published essays in the fields of Welsh writing in English and Modernism.
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New Territories in Modernism - Laura Wainwright
New Territories in Modernism
WRITING WALES IN ENGLISH
CREW series of Critical and Scholarly Studies
General Editors: Kirsti Bohata and Daniel G. Williams (CREW, Swansea University)
This CREW series is dedicated to Emyr Humphreys, a major figure in the literary culture of modern Wales, a founding patron of the Centre for Research into the English Literature and Language of Wales. Grateful thanks are due to the late Richard Dynevor for making this series possible.
Other titles in the series
Stephen Knight, A Hundred Years of Fiction (978-0-7083-1846-1)
Barbara Prys-Williams, Twentieth-Century Autobiography (978-0-7083-1891-1)
Kirsti Bohata, Postcolonialism Revisited (978-0-7083-1892-8)
Chris Wigginton, Modernism from the Margins (978-0-7083-1927-7)
Linden Peach, Contemporary Irish and Welsh Women’s Fiction (978-0-7083-1998-7)
Sarah Prescott, Eighteenth-Century Writing from Wales: Bards and Britons (978-0-7083-2053-2)
Hywel Dix, After Raymond Williams: Cultural Materialism and the Break-Up of Britain (978-0-7083-2153-9)
Matthew Jarvis, Welsh Environments in Contemporary Welsh Poetry (978-0-7083-2152-2)
Harri Garrod Roberts, Embodying Identity: Representations of the Body in Welsh Literature (978-0-7083-2169-0)
Diane Green, Emyr Humphreys: A Postcolonial Novelist (978-0-7083-2217-8)
M. Wynn Thomas, In the Shadow of the Pulpit: Literature and Nonconformist Wales (978-0-7083-2225-3)
Linden Peach, The Fiction of Emyr Humphreys: Contemporary Critical Perspectives (978-0-7083-2216-1)
Daniel Westover, R. S. Thomas: A Stylistic Biography (978-0-7083-2413-4)
Jasmine Donahaye, Whose People? Wales, Israel, Palestine (978-0-7083-2483-7)
Judy Kendall, Edward Thomas: The Origins of His Poetry (978-0-7083-2403-5)
Damian Walford Davies, Cartographies of Culture: New Geographies of Welsh Writing in English (978-0-7083-2476-9)
Daniel G. Williams, Black Skin, Blue Books: African Americans and Wales 1845–1945 (978-0-7083-1987-1)
Andrew Webb, Edward Thomas and World Literary Studies: Wales, Anglocentrism and English Literature (978-0-7083-2622-0)
Alyce von Rothkirch, J. O. Francis, realist drama and ethics: Culture, place and nation (978-1-7831-6070-9)
Rhian Barfoot, Liberating Dylan Thomas: Rescuing a Poet from Psycho-Sexual Servitude (978-1-7831-6184-3)
Daniel G. Williams, Wales Unchained: Literature, Politics and Identity in the American Century (978-1-7831-6212-3)
M. Wynn Thomas, The Nations of Wales 1890–1914 (978-1-78316-837-8)
Richard McLauchlan, Saturday’s Silence: R. S. Thomas and Paschal Reading (978-1-7831-6920-7)
Bethan M. Jenkins, Between Wales and England: Anglophone Welsh Writing of the Eighteenth Century (978-1-7868-3029-6)
M. Wynn Thomas, All that is Wales: The Collected Essays of M. Wynn Thomas (978-1-7868-3088-3)
New Territories in
Modernism
Anglophone Welsh Writing,
1930–1949
WRITING WALES IN ENGLISH
Laura Wainwright
UNIVERSITY OF WALES PRESS
2018
© Laura Wainwright, 2018
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any material form (including photocopying or storing it in any medium by electronic means and whether or not transiently or incidentally to some other use of this publication) without the written permission of the copyright owner. Applications for the copyright owner’s written permission to reproduce any part of this publication should be addressed to the University of Wales Press, 10 Columbus Walk, Brigantine Place, Cardiff CF10 4UP.
www.uwp.co.uk
British Library CIP Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN: 978-1-78683-217-7
e-ISBN: 978-1-78683-219-1
The University of Wales Press acknowledges the financial support of the Welsh Books Council.
The right of Laura Wainwright to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 79 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
img2.jpgThe publisher has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of URLs for any external or third-party internet websites referred to in this book, and does not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate.
Cover image: Robert Alwyn Hughes, Rhymney (1958), oil on canvas. By permission
For Arthur Celyn and Louie Heulyn
Contents
Series Editors’ Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 ‘The dissolving and splitting of solid things’: Welsh Modernism’s ‘crisis of language’
2 ‘Always observant and slightly obscure’: Lynette Roberts as Welsh Modernist
3 Vernon Watkins’s ‘Modern Country of the Arts’
4 Cadaqués and Carmarthenshire: The Modernist ‘Heterotopias’ of Salvador Dalí and Dylan Thomas
5 ‘Hellish Funny’: The Grotesque Modernism of Gwyn Thomas and Rhys Davies
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Series Editors’ Preface
The aim of this series, since its founding in 2004 by Professor M. Wynn Thomas, is to publish scholarly and critical work by established specialists and younger scholars that reflects the richness and variety of the English-language literature of modern Wales. The studies published so far have amply demonstrated that concepts, models and discourses current in the best contemporary studies can illuminate aspects of Welsh culture, and have also foregrounded the potential of the Welsh example to draw attention to themes that are often neglected or marginalised in anglophone cultural studies. The series defines and explores that which distinguishes Wales’s anglophone literature, challenges critics to develop methods and approaches adequate to the task of interpreting Welsh culture, and invites its readers to locate the process of writing Wales in English within comparative and transnational contexts.
Professor Kirsti Bohata and Professor Daniel G. Williams
Founding Editor: Professor M. Wynn Thomas (2004–15)
CREW (Centre for Research into the English
Literature and Language of Wales)
Swansea University
img4.jpgAcknowledgements
For kind permission to include extracts from works I should like to thank the following: Gomer Press for Idris Davies’s Gwalia Deserta; the Rhys Davies Trust for Rhys Davies’s ‘Arfon’; Literature Wales for ‘Man’ and ‘Sande’ by Glyn Jones; Maria Delgado for her translations of Valle-Inclán’s Bohemian Lights; Angharard Rhys and Prydein Rhys for Lynette Roberts’s ‘Poem from Llanybri’, ‘Royal Mail’, ‘Crossed and Uncrossed’, ‘Seagulls’, ‘Plasnewydd’ and ‘Curlew’; David Higham Associates and New Directions Publishing Corporation for Dylan Thomas’s ‘I see the boys of Summer’, ‘The force that through the green fuse’, ‘A process in the weather of the heart’, ‘The Peaches’, ‘The Enemies’, ‘The Map of Love’, ‘A Prospect of the Sea’; David McDuff for his translation of Georg Trakl’s ‘Night’; and Gwendoline Mary Watkins for Vernon Watkins’s ‘Discoveries’, ‘The Collier’ and ‘Ophelia’. Despite my best efforts, I have been unable to trace the copyright holder for Patrick Bridgewater’s translation of ‘Guard Duty’ by August Stramm. I apologise for this omission and encourage the copyright holder to contact me.
Thank you to my Mum and Dad for introducing me to the pleasures of literature, art and creativity. I also owe a debt of gratitude to Professor Katie Gramich, who supervised the Ph.D. thesis on which this book is based, and to Professor Daniel G. Williams for drawing my attention to Chana Kronfeld’s On the Margins of Modernism: Decentering Literary Dynamics. I gratefully acknowledge the financial contribution of the Welsh Books Council in the publication of my work.
Finally, my love and thanks go to Darrell Thomas. This would all have been impossible without you.
Introduction
On 17 March 1987, Raymond Williams presented a lecture as part of a series convened by the University of Bristol. The lecture was called ‘When Was Modernism?’ – a title that Williams ‘borrowed from a book by [his] friend Professor Gwyn Williams: When Was Wales?’¹ – and posited the following argument:
After Modernism is canonized... by the post-war settlement and its accompanying, complicit academic endorsements, there is then the presumption that since Modernism is here in this specific phase or period, there is nothing beyond it... ‘Modernism’ is confined to this highly selective field and denied to everything else in an act of pure ideology, whose first, unconscious irony is that, absurdly, it stops history dead. Modernism being the terminus, everything afterwards is counted out of development. It is after; stuck in the post.²
Nowhere is the exclusionary force of conventional histories of Modernism more palpable than in the country of Raymond Williams’s birth and the subject of Professor Gwyn Williams’s book: Wales. With the exception of Saunders Lewis in the Welsh language, and Dylan Thomas, Caradoc Evans,³ and David Jones (whose work is most often studied in the context of English or ‘British’ Modernism) in English, Wales’s writers have, historically, been debarred from scholarly discussions of literary Modernism. In the case of Welsh writing in English, a minority of scholars have addressed the prospect of a Welsh Modernism as part of more discursive studies of the literature of Wales – notably M. Wynn Thomas in Internal Difference: Twentieth-Century Writing in Wales (1992), Corresponding Cultures: The Two Literatures of Wales (1999) and In the Shadow of the Pulpit: Literature and Nonconformist Wales (2010); and Tony Conran in Frontiers in Anglo-Welsh Poetry (1997). In Modernism from the Margins: The 1930s Poetry of Louis MacNeice and Dylan Thomas (2007), Christopher Wigginton stresses that ‘Welsh Modernism continues to be neglected, even within Wales’;⁴ and yet he limits the scope of his critical inquiry to Dylan Thomas, only mentioning other potentially Modernist Welsh writers in passing. The same can be said of John Goodby’s Under the Spelling Wall: The Poetry of Dylan Thomas (2013). And although, more recently, Goodby and Wigginton have widened the scope of their inquiry, in their collaborative essay, ‘Welsh Modernist Poetry: Dylan Thomas, David Jones and Lynette Roberts’, this still cannot fully justify their substantial and complex claims, for example, that
Welsh Modernism... is a heterogeneous, dispersed, irregularly recurring phenomenon, defined by a lack of the attributes which usually constitute a ‘tradition’, but distinctive because Welsh location, provenance, or identification led to a highly fruitful belated encounter between modernist techniques and ‘the matter of Wales’.⁵
Daniel G. Williams has arrived at a more comprehensive and nuanced understanding of the forms that Modernism took in Wales, identifying its ‘bourgeois, proletarian and folk strains’,⁶ and comparing these ‘aesthetic and intellectual trajectories’⁷ with those of African American Modernisms. Yet, still, no sustained or extensive study of Anglophone Modernism in Wales has been undertaken. My aims in this study are to build on Williams’s scholarship and to afford the topic of Welsh Modernism the critical scrutiny that it deserves by considering a range of Anglophone Welsh writing from the 1930s and 1940s in the context of European Modernist literature and art.
Part of the reason why the notion of a Welsh Modernism has gone mostly unexplored, it seems, is the (often superficial) dissimilarity between canonical Modernist literature and art, and Anglophone Welsh writing of the first half of the twentieth century. Without a long and entrenched ‘Anglo-Welsh’ literary tradition to deviate from (an issue which I examine more closely in chapter one); flourishing, for the most part, after the high Modernist period, between 1930 and 1949; and tending to be concerned with rural and industrialised locations and milieux in a way that contravenes the popular conception of Modernism as ‘an art of cities’,⁸ Anglophone Welsh writing, has, to use Williams’s terms, ‘been counted out of development’ – ‘stuck in the post’ and on the periphery. Yet to exclude Welsh writing from discussions of Modernism on the basis of these narrow criteria is, now, in the current climate of Modernist studies, completely unjustifiable; for critics now recognise the divergent, multifaceted character of Modernism, and appreciate the complex relationship between Modernism, canonicity and geographical, social and cultural specificity. It is now common to hear critics talk of ‘regional Modernisms’. In a book devoted to this subject, for example, Neal Alexander and James Moran have collected essays on Modernism from various different geographical spaces, including regions of Scotland, Ireland, England and Wales.⁹ Laura Doyle and Laura Winkiel have coined the term ‘geomodernisms’, to denote such a ‘locational’ approach to Modernism’s ‘engagement with cultural and political discourses of global modernity’.¹⁰ They argue that this ‘unveils both unsuspected modernist
experiments in marginal
texts and suspected correlations between those texts and others that appear either more conventional or more postmodern’.¹¹ ‘Across their differences’, Doyle and Winkiel suggest, ‘these works share something that allows them to be grouped together: a self-consciousness about positionality.’¹² Channa Kronfeld is similarly concerned with ideas about ‘positionality’ in On the Margins of Modernism: Decentering Literary Dynamics (1996). Using Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari’s concept of ‘minor literature’¹³ as a starting point, she sets out to ‘prepare the ground for... a less exclusionary theoretical and historical model of marginal modernisms, elaborated and applied to the production and reception of Hebrew and Yiddish poetic modernisms’.¹⁴ I am centrally concerned in this book with bringing the progressive, expansive, ‘less exclusionary’ scholarship of Kronfeld, Doyle and Winkiel into dialogue with writing from Wales.
Fundamental to my argument is what I regard as certain key Anglophone Welsh writers’ distinctively Welsh Modernist use of language. In chapter one, I read the diverse linguistic experimentation of Gwyn Thomas, Glyn Jones, Idris Davies and David Jones as manifestations of a particular modern ‘crisis of language’ in Wales,¹⁵ generated by unprecedented social and cultural change in the country during this period. Adopting the kind of ‘locational approach’ espoused by Doyle, Winkiel and Kronfeld, I argue that these socio-cultural conditions made Wales an especially fertile territory for a burgeoning Welsh Modernism. I expand on this argument in chapter two, where I demonstrate how Lynette Roberts consciously embraced and utilised these circumstances in order to push linguistic boundaries and fully articulate her own experience as a female incomer in rural Wales during the Second World War. In chapter three, I also place Vernon Watkins’s itinerant, intertextual poetic idiom within this developing picture of Welsh Modernism. Particulars of place and time continue to frame my comparison, in chapter four, of Dylan Thomas’s use of Carmarthenshire and Salvador Dalí’s use of Cadaqués, in rural Spain, as sites of transgressive, Modernist possibility. My use of the visual arts in this chapter – and indeed throughout this book – pertains to my overall aim to represent and appreciate Modernism in all its multiplicity and diversity. In chapter four, I challenge another common critical assumption: that late Modernism, such as that found in Welsh writing in English, is necessarily derivative in nature. I argue, moreover, that Modernism in Wales is, in Tony Conran’s words, ‘home-grown’ – a product of unique geographical, social, cultural and temporal conditions – as well as being ‘part of an international climate’.¹⁶ This open, inclusive perspective continues to inform my analysis in chapter five, in which I explore, with reference to German Expressionism and Spanish esperpento theatre, the presence and significance of Modernist techniques of the grotesque in the short fiction of Gwyn Thomas and Rhys Davies. Here, I also expose the often socially engaged and politically ambitious impetus of Welsh Modernism, problematising, once again, narrow literary histories, of the kind that Raymond Williams critiqued in 1987, that view Modernism as essentially detached and rarefied in nature. My aim in this study is not to provide an exhaustive account of the entire trajectory of Modernism in Wales. Rather, I hope that the chapters in this book will speak to each other in thought-provoking ways and also shed light on the work of Welsh writers whose work I have not had space to discuss in more depth here. These might include slightly earlier writers such as Caradoc Evans, or later writers such as Tony Conran. In essence, the very purpose of this study is not to ‘stop history dead’, in Raymond Williams’s words, but to generate and inspire future research and critical debate in Welsh Modernism and indeed Modernism studies more broadly, both within and outside Wales.
1
‘The dissolving and splitting of solid things’: Welsh Modernism’s ‘crisis of language’
Language and its deficiency in the context of the modern age preoccupy Modernist writers. This ‘crisis of language’¹ can be traced back to the French Symbolist poets of the nineteenth century, who, as Elizabeth McCombie notes, shared ‘a drive for artistic revolution... born of... a sense that everything had been done, written, and felt’.² Attempting to break away from what they perceived to be an exhausted poetic idiom, the French Symbolists pioneered a new kind of poetry in which language is approached in radically innovative ways.³ Arthur Rimbaud, for example, reflects on this process in his collection of autobiographical prose-poetry, Une saison en enfer, or A Season in Hell (1873):
I invented the colour of vowels! – A black, E white, I red, O blue, U green – I organized the shape and movement of every consonant, and by means of instinctive rhythms, flattered myself that I was the inventor of a new language, accessible sooner or later to all the senses.⁴
Paradoxically, however, the mood of this revelation is one of both artistic accomplishment and defeat. Indeed, A Season in Hell is pervaded with instances of linguistic failure. In ‘Bad Blood’ the narrator asks, ‘Do I understand nature yet? Do I know myself? – No more words’ (p. 219). And in ‘Morning’ he confesses, ‘For my part, I can no more explain myself than a beggar with his endless Pater Nosters and Ave Marias. I no longer know how to speak!’ (p. 251) Moreover, A Season in Hell seems to demonstrate how the French Symbolists’ attempts at poetic rejuvenation ultimately served to compound their impression of linguistic crisis – not least because in Symbolist poetry, particularly, as McCombie explains, in the work of Stéphane Mallarmé,
language [is] freed from conventional modes of denotation [and] assumes material existence independent of what it might signify; yet at the same time the word experienced as word creates an immediate consciousness of the absence of identity between word and sign. The word [therefore] points... to a thrilling Nothingness, a referential failure, at the heart of language itself.⁵
Writers and thinkers of the early twentieth century destabilised language in a similar way. Between the years 1907 and 1911, the Swiss linguist, Ferdinand de Saussure, posited a theory of language centred on the principle of arbitrariness. More specifically, Saussure argued that ‘the bond between the signifier and the signified is arbitrary. Since I mean by sign the whole that results from the associating of the signifier with the signified,’ he elaborated, ‘I can simply say: the linguistic sign is arbitrary.’⁶ Saussure disrupted traditional ideas about language further by proposing that ‘in language there are only differences’,⁷ and no absolute values. ‘Whether we take the signified or the signifier,’ he concluded, ‘language has neither ideas nor sounds that existed before the linguistic system, but only conceptual and phonic differences that have issued from that system.’⁸ For Saussure, then, language has a fundamentally elusive quality, which is also underlined in the poetry of the early twentieth century – most famously, perhaps, in the work of T. S. Eliot. In ‘The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock’ (1917), for example, the speaker decides that ‘It is impossible to say just what I mean!’,⁹ while the poetic voices of The Waste Land (1922) enact and reinforce the theme of faltering and failing language. This can be seen in ‘The Burial of the Dead’, where the speaker recollects:
...when we came back, late, from the hyacinth garden,
Your arms full, and your hair wet, I could not
Speak, and my eyes failed, I was neither
Living nor dead, and I knew nothing,
Looking into the heart of light, the silence.¹⁰
Eliot’s fragmentary closing lines provide another memorable example:
I sat upon the shore
Fishing, with the arid plain behind me
Shall I at least set my lands in order?
London Bridge is falling down falling down falling down
Poi s’ascose nel foco che gli affina
Quando fiam uti chelidon – O swallow swallow
Le Prince d’Aquitaine à la tour abolie
These fragments I have shored against my ruins¹¹
Indeed, the same preoccupations re-emerge in ‘East Coker’ (1940) – the second of Eliot’s Four Quartets:
So here I am, in the middle way, having had twenty years –
Twenty years largely wasted, the years of l’entre deux guerres –
Trying to learn to use words, and every attempt
Is a wholly new start, and a different kind of failure
Because one has only learnt to get the better of words
For the thing one no longer has to say, or the way in which
One is no longer disposed to say it. And so each venture
Is a new beginning, a raid on the inarticulate
With shabby equipment always deteriorating
In the general mess of imprecision of feeling,¹²
Echoing Rimbaud and Mallarmé, in all of these poems Eliot questions the effectiveness of language as a means of knowing and of expressing the world.
A feeling of disjunction between language and the world is often also expressed in Modernist fiction. In his short story, ‘Die Verwandlung’ or ‘The Metamorphosis’ (1915), in which the protagonist, Gregor Samsa, awakens to find that he has been miraculously ‘transformed in his bed into a giant insect’,¹³ Franz Kafka employs a strikingly laconic, matter-of-fact style in order to narrate extraordinary and terrifying external events. Kafka’s work is most frequently aligned with Expressionism – an aesthetic first associated with visual art which I discuss more fully in chapter five – and several other Modernist movements that formed in continental Europe during the early decades of the twentieth century seem similarly to have been born out of a consciousness that language had become estranged from reality. In ‘The Founding and Manifesto of Futurism’ (1909), for instance, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti asserts: ‘Up to now literature has exalted a pensive immobility, ecstasy, and sleep. We intend to exalt aggressive action, a feverish insomnia, the racer’s stride, the mortal leap.’¹⁴ ‘No work without an aggressive character’, he continues, ‘can be a masterpiece. Poetry must be conceived as a violent attack on unknown forces, to reduce and prostrate them before man.’¹⁵ Marinetti’s proclamations register Futurism’s attempt to liberate the written word from the structures of the past and reinvent literature for a new epoch of militarism, patriotism and technological advance; as he avowed in his ‘Technical Manifesto of Futurist Literature’ (1912), ‘we make use of... every ugly sound, every expressive cry from the violent life that surrounds us... After free verse, here finally are words-in-freedom.’¹⁶ This theme of creative freedom resurfaces in ‘The First Manifesto of Surrealism’ (1924), where André Breton proclaims:
Under the pretence of civilisation and progress, we have managed to banish from the mind everything that may rightly or wrongly be termed superstition, or fancy; forbidden is any kind of search for truth which is not in conformance with accepted practices. It was, apparently, by pure chance that a part of our mental world which we pretended not to be concerned with any longer... has been brought back to light. For this we must give thanks to Sigmund Freud. On the basis of these discoveries a current of opinion is finally forming by means of which the human explorer will be able to carry his investigations much further, authorised as he will henceforth be not to confine himself solely to the most summary realities.¹⁷
Here, Breton calls for ‘the mind’ to extricate itself from the oppressive, ‘accepted’ discourses of ‘civilisation’ and ‘progress’, and access a more vital modern world, illuminated and invigorated by the Freudian unconscious. ‘Language has been given to man’, Breton argues, ‘so that he can make Surrealist use of it,’¹⁸ opening up literature to new areas of non-rational, subjective experience.
In a sense, both the Futurist and Surrealist manifestos are products of what Sheppard calls the ‘disjunction between social discourse and literary discourse’,¹⁹ which he sees as fundamental to the modern ‘crisis of language’. More specifically, Sheppard proposes that
Where the ‘surface’ of classical [that is to say, traditional or long-established] writing takes strength from and corresponds with the social and linguistic structures which it presupposes and celebrates, the modern writer cannot assume this correspondence. He has to dismantle the structures of the conventional world and ‘explode’ language before he can create an adequate ‘verbal ikon’.²⁰
This idea of Modernist writers dismantling the conventional world and ‘exploding’ language is particularly relevant to the Italian Futurist movement, echoing