Cultural Institute Previous Events
2022 Events
'Land of Change: Stories of Struggle & Solidarity from Wales'
Taliesin Create, Singleton Campus, Swansea University SA2 8PP
*Please note this is an in-person event*
As part of the Literary Salon series, The Cultural Institute and Culture Matters invites you to the launch of Land of Change: Stories of Struggle and Solidarity from Wales. Edited by Gemma June Howell, Land of Change is a colourful anthology of bold artworks and documentary photography as well as insightful, enlightening and poignant creative pieces, speeches, journalism and memoir. It is a celebration of the diverse collectanea of underrepresented and working-class voices from Wales.
Panel members include anthology contributors, Kate Cleaver, Rhoda Thomas and Rhys Trimble, Gemma June Howell, Associate Editor at Culture Matters and Daniel G. Williams, Professor of English Literature and Co-Director of the Richard Burton Centre for the Study of Wales at Swansea University.
Kate Cleaver
Kate is an Anglo-Indian writer studying for a PhD with Swansea University. She is researching the lives of ordinary people who found themselves incarcerated in the Briton Ferry Insane Asylum, Vernon House. She is creating stories and has found that linking her stories to historical fact is a way to bring people from the past to life. In 2019 she was longlisted for the New Welsh Writers’ Award and has had a memoir published by Parthian in Just So You Know, and another in Painting the Beauty Queens Orange: Women’s Lives in the 1970s (Honno Welsh Women’s Press, 2021).
Rhys Trimble
Rhys is a neurodiverse, bilingual poet, teacher, translator, performer, critic, musician, sound artist, visual artist, shaman, pastynwr, performance artist, publisher, editor and activist who provided a speech at the Banthebill protest in Bangor. Born in Zambia, raised in South Wales and resident in North Wales, he is the author of 20 or so books.
Rhoda Thomas
Originally from London, Rhoda has been settled in Wales for 40 years, contributing to the training of social workers, counsellors and doctors as a psychologist and sociologist. She has held office in student and trade unions, and with Tim Evans, she convenes the annual Llanelli 1911 Railway Strike Commemoration Festival. She is a founding member of the Live Poets Society, which brings together poets from across south Wales for workshops and open-mic events. A member of the Socialist Workers Party, she gives talks and writes on subjects such as the lives of female revolutionaries and the damage to our health from the food industry. She reads regularly at poetry groups and events. She is the author of Survive and grow in difficult times, and her poetry can be found in recent anthologies, in Red Poets, and in her poetry collections. In this prose-piece she writes about the challenges she has faced in life as a working-class woman, and the value of solidarity.
Gemma June Howell (Editor)
Gemma is a grass-roots activist, writer, poet, tutor, academic, Associate Editor for Culture Matters and regular contributor to Nation Cymru. Co-founder of the CSOS, she co-organised the Sister March (Cardiff, 2017). Previously published in Onward/Ymlaen! and with the Red Poets, she performs annually at the Merthyr Rising Festival. Her work has appeared in Bloodaxe Books (2015), The London Magazine (2020) and Tongue & Talk, (Made in Manchester, for BBC Radio 4, 2021). Gemma has recently submitted her PhD: an emancipatory project exploring collective trauma, and transcendence. Entitled Concrete Diamonds, it’s a hybrid novel, featuring an interwoven, eco-feminist mythopoeic tale, punctuated with graffiti, punk-style concrete poetry. Essentially a polyphonic homage to working-class people living in post-industrial Britain, the work captures the life worlds of five generations and encompasses a range of literary styles: from steam-of-consciousness to polemic, melodic and poetic, gritty realist and dark comedic. Underpinned with critical theory, the novel illuminates the past origins and present conditions of poverty, discrimination, and subjugation of underrepresented and marginalised people.
Daniel G. Williams
Daniel is Professor of English Literature and Co-Director of the Richard Burton Centre for the Study of Wales at Swansea University. He is also Co-director with Kirsti Bohata of CREW – the Centre for Research into the English Literature and Langauge of Wales. He has edited several books and is the author of Ethnicity and Cultural Authority: From Arnold to Du Bois (2006), Black Skin, Blue Books: African Americans and Wales (2012) and Wales Unchained: Literature, Politics and Identity in the American Century (2015). 2021 saw the publication of a new edition of his collection of Raymond Williams’s writings, Who Speaks for Wales? Nation, Culture, Identity. It first appeared in 2003 and the new expanded edition marked the Centenary of Raymond Williams’s birth.
'Cymru, Cynefin and Canons: How Literatures Shape Our World'
*Please note this is an online event*
New research suggests that Welsh literary tastes - even in English - differ from those of the rest of the UK. How do Welsh readers see the world differently? What roles do local reading and writing communities play in this?
As part of the AHRC-funded Big Book Review project, join authors Cynan Jones and Manon Steffan Ros in conversation with Professor Kirsti Bohata and Dr Richard Robinson (Prifysgol Abertawe/Swansea University) and Dr Aidan Byrne (Prifysgol Wolverhampton University) as they discuss the relationship between story and place, the importance of Welsh writing and Welsh literary identity.
Aidan will also reveal findings about Welsh reading habits indicated by our work with the BBC's Novels That Shaped Our World, and invite you to take part in our research to tell us what really makes a good book.
Cynan Jones is an acclaimed fiction writer from Wales. His work has appeared in over twenty countries, and in journals and magazines including Granta and The New Yorker. He is the winner of a number of awards including the BBC National Short Story Award and the Jerwood Fiction Prize, and has also written for television and radio.
Manon Steffan Ros is an author and scriptwriter. She has written more than 40 books and has been awarded prizes including Wales Book of the Year and the Tir Na N’Og prize for children’s literature. Her novel, Llyfr Glas Nebo, has been translated into eight languages. She lives in Meirionnydd with her sons.
Professor Kirsti Bohata is a leading scholar in the field of Welsh writing in English, and has published on postcolonial theory, queer literature, disability studies and literary geography from the late nineteenth-century to the present. Her most recent books are Queer Square Mile, an anthology of queer short stories from Wales (Parthian, 2022) and Disability in Industrial Britain (Manchester University Press, 2020) which is fully open access. She is Co-Director of CREW (the Centre for Research into the English Literature and Language of Wales) and the multidisciplinary Richard Burton Centre for the Study of Wales at Swansea University and co-Chair of the Association for Welsh Writing in English.
Dr Richard Robinson is Associate Professor in the Department of Literature, Media and Language. He works in twentieth-century and contemporary literature, with a particular interest in modernism and its afterlife, style, Irish writing, and literary representations of central Europe. He is the author of two monographs, Narratives of the European Border: A History of Nowhere (Palgrave, 2007) and John McGahern and Modernism (Bloomsbury, 2017). He has published on writers such as John McGahern, Kazuo Ishiguro, James Joyce, Italo Svevo, Elena Ferrante, Rebecca West, Ian McEwan and Edward St Aubyn.
Dr Aidan Byrne is senior lecturer in English Literatures at Wolverhampton University. His research includes Welsh literatures, politicians’ fiction and popular culture. He is currently co-investigator on the AHRC-funded Novel Perceptions digital humanities project exploring canonical anxieties, literary tastes and popular ideas about literary quality. He is secretary of the Association for Welsh Writing in English / Cymdeithas Llen Saesneg Cymru and can be found @plashingvole.
'Editing the Harlem Renaissance': Dr Rachel Farebrother in conversation with Dr Miriam Thaggert
*Please note this is an online event*
In this special online event, Dr Rachel Farebrother and Dr Miriam Thaggert discuss co-editing A History of the Harlem Renaissance (Cambridge University Press, 2021) and African American Literature in Transition, 1920-1930 (CUP, 2022)
The Cambridge History of the Harlem Renaissance presents new essays that explore the unprecedented flowering of African American cultural expression in the 1920s and 1930s that is now known as the Harlem Renaissance. In its attention to a wide range of genres and forms – from the roman à clef and the bildungsroman to dance and book illustrations – the volume seeks to at once encapsulate and analyze the eclecticism of Harlem Renaissance cultural expression. It takes stock of nearly a hundred years of “Harlem Renaissance studies” and considers what the future augurs for the study of “the New Negro.”
African American Literature in Transition, 1920-1930 presents original essays that map ideological, historical, and cultural shifts in the 1920s. Complicating the familiar reading of the 1920s as a decade that began with a spectacular boom and ended with disillusionment and bust, the collection explores the range and diversity of Black cultural production. Emphasizing a generative contrast between the ephemeral qualities of periodicals, clothes, and décor and the relative fixity of canonical texts, the volume captures in its dynamics a cultural movement that was fluid and expansive.
Miriam Thaggert is Associate Professor of African American Literature at SUNY-Buffalo. She is the author of Images of Black Modernism: Verbal and Visual Strategies of the Harlem Renaissance (University of Massachusetts Press, 2010). With Rachel Farebrother, she is co-editor of A History of the Harlem Renaissance (Cambridge University Press, 2021) and African American Literature in Transition, 1920-1930 (CUP, 2022). Her essays have appeared in African American Review, American Quarterly, American Literary History, Feminist Modernist Studies, Meridians: Feminism, Race, Transnationalism, and the edited volume New Modernist Studies. Her new monograph, Riding Jane Crow: African American Women on the American Railroad (University of Illinois) will be published in June, 2022.
Rachel Farebrother is a Senior Lecturer in American Studies at Swansea University. She is the author of The Collage Aesthetic in the Harlem Renaissance (Ashgate, 2009). Her essays have appeared in Comparative American Studies, Journal of American Studies, MELUS, Modernism/modernity, and various edited collections. With Miriam Thaggert (SUNY-Buffalo), she has co-edited The History of the Harlem Renaissance (CUP, 2021) and African American Literature in Transition, 1920-1930 (CUP, 2022).
'Brittle with Relics': Richard King in conversation with Kirsti Bohata
In association with the Richard Burton Centre for the Study of Wales
Taliesin Create, Singleton Campus, Swansea University SA2 8PP
Richard King will be in conversation with Kirsti Bohata, Professor of English Literature and Director of CREW (Centre for Research into the English Literature and Language of Wales) at Swansea University.
A landmark history of the people of Wales during a period of great national change.
In the closing third of the twentieth century, Wales experienced the simultaneous effects of deindustrialisation, the subsequent loss of employment and community cohesion, and the struggle for its language and identity. These changes were largely forced upon the country, whose own voice, rarely agreed upon within its borders, had to fight to be heard outside of Wales.
Brittle with Relics is a history of the people of Wales undergoing some of the country's most seismic and traumatic events: the disasters of Aberfan and Tryweryn; the rise of the Welsh language movement; the Miners' Strike and its aftermath; and the narrow vote in favour of partial devolution.
Featuring the voices of Neil Kinnock, Rowan Williams, Leanne Wood, Gruff Rhys, Michael Sheen, Nicky Wire, Sian James, Welsh language activists, members of former mining communities and many more, this is a vital history of a nation determined to survive, while maintaining the hope that Wales will one day thrive on its own terms.
About the author
Richard King is the author of Original Rockers (shortlisted for the Gordon Burn Prize and a Rough Trade, The Times and Uncut Book of the Year), How Soon Is Now? (the Sunday Times Music Book of the Year) and The Lark Ascending (a Rough Trade, Mojo and Evening Standard Book of the Year, shortlisted for the Penderyn Prize), all published by Faber & Faber. He was born into a bilingual family in South Wales and for the last twenty years has lived in the rural county of Powys, in mid-Wales.
'Ticking': Ellie Rees in conversation with Alan Bilton
Taliesin Create, Singleton Campus, Swansea University SA2 8PP
As part of the Literary Salon Series, Ellie Rees will be in conversation with Dr Alan Bilton, author and Senior Lecturer of English Literature and Creative Writing at Swansea University.
The poems in Ticking deep map a beautiful but apparently empty strip of the South Wales coastline that looks across the Bristol Channel to Exmoor. The collection could be classified as nature writing, though the term, deep mapping is a more accurate description of the eclectic subject matter: there are ghosts, suicides, and ruins as well as dung spiders, stone masons and insect apprehension. Many of the poems focus on the history and geography, archaeology and wild life of a two-mile stretch of the Welsh coastline. However, the mapping in Ticking is not only confined to the tangible or material, it includes the intangible, the dreams and hopes, imaginations and fears of its residents both in the past and the present.
About the author
After retiring as a teacher in 2009, Ellie realised that there was more to life than gardening and so decided to become a student once more. She gained an MA and a PhD in Creative Writing from Swansea University, and her work is now widely published. She writes memoir, creative-non-fiction and essays but her main love is poetry. Ellie’s poems have been published in such places as The New Welsh Review, Poetry Wales, The Lonely Crowd, Black Bough Poems, The Cabinet of Heed, Trestle Ties and The Broken Spine. She has been shortlisted in several prestigious competitions and in 2020 won the Selected or Neglected Competition run by The Hedgehog Press. Ellie’s first poetry collection titled Ticking was published on January 14th 2022 by The Hedgehog Press.
'Painting Beauty Queens Orange: Women’s Lives in the 1970s'
Taliesin Create, Singleton Campus, Swansea University SA2 8PP
The ‘70s wasn’t all glam rock and flares, punk and pogo-ing… In Painting the Beauty Queens Orange, the women who lived the decade reveal what it meant to push boundaries, claim your identity, and carve out your place amidst the winter of discontent, the scorching summer of ‘76 and the rise of Thatcherism. One young woman says a forced goodbye to her newborn baby. Another grasps new opportunities and sets sail on a LGP Tanker with a crew of men. A third asserts her sexual identity. A fourth sets up a kitchen table business that launches an international brand. These stories of ambition and adventure, motherhood and marriage, are by turns heart-breaking, humorous, and honest.
Contributors Carolyn Lewis ‘The Sound of Water’ and Kate Cleaver ‘Firsts’, along with the book’s editor, Rebecca F. John, will be In conversation with Dr Alan Bilton, author and Senior Lecturer of English Literature and Creative Writing at Swansea University.
Kate Cleaver
Kate Cleaver is an Anglo-Indian writer studying for a PhD with Swansea University. She is researching the lives of ordinary people who found themselves incarcerated in the Briton Ferry Insane Asylum, Vernon House. She has begun to create stories and has found that linking her stories to historical fact is a way to bring people from the past to life; she is asking if those ghosts can be recreated into stories, into creative history. In 2019 she was long listed in the New Welsh Writers Award and has just had a memoir published by Parthian in ‘Just So You Know’.
Carolyn Lewis
Born in Cardiff, Carolyn’s work has appeared in previous Honno anthologies. Her first novel, Missing Nancy was published by Accent Press in 2008. She gained an MPhil in Writing at Glamorgan University (now the University of South Wales). Her stories have won national and local prizes and have appeared in The New Welsh Review, Mslexia and Route Magazine amongst others. She’s worked as a creative writing tutor for many years and two text books have been published based on her teaching methods. Currently she’s taking a PhD at Swansea University for which she’s writing a new novel.
Rebecca F. John
Rebecca F. John was born in 1986, and grew up in Pwll, a small village on the south Wales coast. She holds a BA in English with Creative Writing and an MA in Creative Writing from Swansea University, as well as a PGCE PCET from the University of Wales Trinity Saint David. Her short stories have been broadcast on BBC Radio 4 and BBC Radio 4Extra. In 2015, her short story ‘The Glove Maker's Numbers’ was shortlisted for the Sunday Times EFG Short Story Award. She is the winner of the PEN International New Voices Award 2015. Her first short story collection, Clown's Shoes, was published through Parthian in 2015. Her first novel, The Haunting of Henry Twist, was published through Serpent's Tail in July 2017. It was shortlisted for the Costa First Novel Award. In 2022, she will publish her first children's book with Firefly Press, as well as a second adult novel, The Empty Greatcoat, and a short novel, Fannie, with Honno Press.
Patrick Jones and Susie Wild
Taliesin Create, Singleton Campus, Swansea University SA2 8PP
Join Swansea alumni poets Patrick Jones and Susie Wild as they read from their latest collections ‘Fuse/Fracture (Poems 2001-2021)' and ‘Windfalls’
Patrick Jones is author of six plays, three spoken word albums, nine books of poetry and lyricist on the Even in Exile album (James Dean Bradfield). He is currently Writer in Residence with The Royal College of Psychiatrists in Wales and adapting his 2016 play, Before I Leave, into a film. He was born in Tredegar, Wales. His latest book is a special 20th anniversary edition Fuse/Fracture (Poems 2001-2021). He has four children and two cats and lives at the foot of a mountain.
patrick-jones.info
twitter: @heretic101
FUSE / FRACTURE (POEMS 2001-2021):
A 20th anniversary edition with a foreword by James Dean Bradfield. These are elegies, protest songs and battle cries as Jones speaks to and for the disaffected, bearing witness to contemporary and political concerns. 28 new poems also turn their gaze to the personal; haunted by ghosts of both the living and the dead. An inventory of scars where love once lived.
Susie Wild is author of the poetry collections Windfalls and Better Houses, the short story collection The Art of Contraception listed for the Edge Hill Prize, and the novella Arrivals. Her work has recently featured in Poetry Wales, Carol Ann Duffy’s pandemic project Write Where We Are Now, The Atlanta Review and Ink, Sweat & Tears. She is also Publishing Editor at Parthian Books specialising in poetry and fiction. She currently lives in a garret on a leafy avenue in Cardiff.
http://susiewild.blogspot.com
twitter: @Soozerama
WINDFALLS:
In Windfalls, Wild writes of fruit blown down by the wind, of unexpected and unearned gains which renew the beauty and joy of life. These are also stories of heroines who fall or jump from pedestals, taking risks in a world that is often dangerous for women, but refusing to settle for the conventional. Wild continues to bring us her refreshingly slant world view, whether unpicking the domestic, the political or the environmental.
2021 Events
'Voice and Form in Contemporary Fiction: Women Authors from Wales and Europe in conversation'
In this special online event, five critically-acclaimed women authors from Wales and Europe will discuss and read from their work. Rebecca F John, Caryl Lewis and Efa Lois (Wales) will come together with Nora Ikstena (Latvia) and Alena Mornštajnová (Czech Republic) to explore approaches to fictionalising history and writing family, community and place.
Chaired by Dr Kathryn Jones
The Panelists:
Nora Ikstena is one of the most visible and influential prose writers in Latvia. After obtaining a degree in Philology from the University of Latvia in 1992, she went on to study English literature at Columbia University. In her prose, Nora Ikstena often reflects on life, love, death and faith. Soviet Milk(2015, shortlisted for the Annual Literature Award for best prose and translated into numerous languages including Japanese, German, Croatian, English, Hungarian, Italian and Russian), Besa (2012), Celebration of Life (1998, translated into Norwegian, Italian, Danish, Swedish), and The Virgin's Lesson (2001) are some of her most widely appreciated novels. The novel Amour Fou has been adapted for theatre and published in Russian (2010). Ikstena is also a prolific author of biographical fiction, non-fiction, scripts, essays and collections of short prose. She is an active participant in Latvia's cultural and political life and a co-founder of the International Writers and Translators’ House in Ventspils. In 2006, she received the Baltic Assembly Prize in literature.
Alena Mornštajnová is a teacher of English and translator and author of five successful novels. Her most recent novel, Tiché roky (Years of Silence, 2019), has confirmed her position as a critically acclaimed, bestselling novelist with more than 500,000 copies of her books sold in the Czech Republic alone. Rights for her most successful novel Hana have been sold to nineteen countries including United Kingdom, Austria, Italy, France, Poland, The Netherlands and Russia.
Rebecca F. John was born in 1986, and grew up in Pwll, a small village on the south Wales coast. She holds a BA in English with Creative Writing and an MA in Creative Writing from Swansea University, as well as a PGCE PCET from the University of Wales Trinity Saint David. Her short stories have been broadcast on BBC Radio 4 and BBC Radio 4Extra. In 2015, her short story ‘The Glove Maker's Numbers’ was shortlisted for the Sunday Times EFG Short Story Award. She is the winner of the PEN International New Voices Award 2015. Her first short story collection, Clown's Shoes, was published through Parthian in 2015. Her first novel, The Haunting of Henry Twist, was published through Serpent's Tail in July 2017. It was shortlisted for the Costa First Novel Award. In 2022, she will publish her first children's book with Firefly Press, as well as a second adult novel, The Empty Greatcoat, and a short novel, Fannie, with Honno Press.
Efa Lois is an artist and writer originally from Ceredigion. Her work focuses primarily on mythology, the history of Welsh women, and the natural world and the importance of preserving it. She was awarded the Literature Wales New Writer's Bursary Award in 2020. She was the official artist of Tafwyl in 2018, 2019, 2020 and 2021. Her artwork has appeared in Cadw's' Welsh Women Making History', 'Henriet y Syffrajet' by Angharad Tomos (Gwasg Carreg Gwalch, 2018), '10 o Sir Benfro' (Narberth Museum, 2021), and 'Y Stori Orau' by Lleucu Roberts (2021 National Eisteddfod Prose Medal Winner, Y Lolfa). Her paintings will also appear in Jon Gower's volume 'Cymry o Fri' (Y Lolfa, 2021). She is currently working on writing and drawing two volumes for children.
Caryl Lewis is a Welsh novelist. She has won Wales Book of the Year twice for her literary fiction and the Tir na n-Og Award for best children’s fiction in 2004 and 2015. Her novel Martha, Jac a Sianco was adapted for film and won 6 Welsh BAFTAS and the Spirit of the Festival Award at the 2010 Celtic Media Festival. Her work is on the Welsh curriculum and is a successful screenwriter (working on BBC/S4C thrillers Hinterland and Hidden). Her debut English language novel DRIFT will be published by Penguin in April 2022 and Seed, her debut English novel for readers of 8+ will be published by MacMillan UK and MacMillan US in May 2022. She lives with her family on a farm near Aberystwyth in Wales.
Dr Kathryn Jones is Associate Professor of French at Swansea University. She chairs the national panel for Welsh-medium Modern Languages. She has published in the fields of French and German contemporary culture, francophone and French female postcolonial writers and travel writers, conflict studies and memory studies. Her most recent book, Hidden Text: Hidden Nation: (Re)Discoveries of Wales in Travel Writing in French and German (1780-2018), which she co-wrote with Carol Tully and Heather Williams, was published by Liverpool University Press in 2020.
'European Writers' is an on-going project by EUNIC London aiming to promote European Literature in the UK. This event is supported by the Czech Centre London, Latvian Literature and the Embassy of Latvia.
In partnership with Literature Wales and Swansea University's Cultural Institute.
Welsh English: Rob Penhallurick in conversation with Jonnie Robinson
To mark the publication of Welsh English (De Gruyter, 2020), by Rob Penhallurick, Heli Paulasto and Benjamin Jones, Rob will be in conversation with Jonnie Robinson, Lead Curator of Spoken English at the British Library. The discussion will touch on the variety, history and social status of Welsh English, as well as the experience of writing this first comprehensive book-length overview of research on spoken English in Wales. In addition, Rob and Jonnie will talk about their ongoing collaboration aimed at preserving and promoting the historical audio recordings of the Survey of Anglo-Welsh Dialects.
Welsh English: the volume
Present-day accents and dialects of Welsh English are the combined outcome of historical language shift from Welsh to English, continued bilingualism, intense contacts between Wales and England, and multicultural immigration. As a result, Welsh English is a distinctive, regionally and sociolinguistically diverse variety. In addition to existing research, Welsh English uses a wide range of spoken corpus data gathered from across Wales in order to describe the phonology, lexis and grammar of English in Wales. It includes discussion of sociolinguistic and cultural contexts, and of ongoing change in Welsh English. The book is accessible to the non-specialist, but of particular use to scholars, teachers and students interested in English in Wales, Britain and the world. It provides an unparalleled resource on this long-standing and vibrant variety.
Rob Penhallurick is the author of Studying the English Language (2003, 2010, Palgrave Macmillan), Studying Dialect (2018, Palgrave Macmillan), and a contributor to the Mouton World Atlas of Variation in English, the Electronic World Atlas of Varieties of English (https://ewave-atlas.org), Language in the British Isles (Cambridge University Press), The Oxford History of English Lexicography and other leading works on varieties of English and their study. He has worked for four of the major dialect surveys of Europe: BBC Voices, the Atlas Linguarum Europae, the Survey of English Dialects, and the Survey of Anglo-Welsh Dialects. Rob is also the curator of the Archive of Welsh English and author of two monographs and many essays on Welsh English.
Jonnie Robinson is Lead Curator of Spoken English at the British Library and responsible for the Library’s extensive archive of sound recordings of British accents and dialects. He has been fortunate to work closely with sound recordings created for two nationwide surveys of regional speech, the Survey of English Dialects and BBC Voices and in 2010 co-curated the world’s first major exhibition on the English Language, Evolving English: One Language, Many Voices. His books include East Midlands English (de Gruyter, 2018 with Natalie Braber) and A Thesaurus of English Dialect and Slang (CUP, 2021).
'The Dirt': Marianne Tuckman in conversation with David Britton
Screening and discussion followed by Q&A
Terrified, she calls her cleaner, a punk about to be evicted, to come round and help, but despite all their efforts, the house just gets dirtier and dirtier...
Tomorrow, she had planned to have children and play with them. She wonders if this will be possible.
BIO:
Marianne is a performer, deviser, dance artist and writer based between Berlin and the UK where she is studying a research lead MPhil in creative writing (Swansea University), focussing on the relationship between text and embodied live performance.
Her mission: to make words sweat.
Her method: to love through conversation.
The communication of stories is what motivates Marianne to make work that combines humour, poetic metaphors, guttural dancing and.... chat.
Marianne generally authors/ co-authors projects that she performs herself and has presented work at venues including the Megaron Athens Concert Hall, Vorspiel -CTM -Transmediale Festival (Berlin), Blue Elephant Theatre (London), Hasta Trilce (Buenos Aires) and Arts Printing House (Vilnius). She has worked as a performer in National Theater Reinickendorf (Vinge/ Muller, Berliner Festspieler), Manque La Banca (film), 12 Days (Film 4), Punderson Gardens (Arket Christmas campaign) and João Cidade (dance theatre) among others.Watch the Trailer: https://youtu.be/IdD_V40AkrM
10th May 2021 - Elizabeth Montagu Correspondence Online (EMCO) Launch Event
Elizabeth Montagu Correspondence Online (EMCO) Launch Event: Phase 2 (Letters from Elizabeth Montagu to the poet and philosopher James Beattie, and Huntington Library images)
Join us for the launch of 'Phase 2 (Letters from Elizabeth Montagu to the poet and philosopher James Beattie, and Huntington Library images) of the Elizabeth Montagu Correspondence Online (EMCO)' with Professor Nicole Pohl, Professor Caroline Franklin, Dr Elizabeth Eger, Dr Joost Hengstmenge, Joanna Barker, Dr. Anna Senkiw, Dr. Jack Orchard, and Alexander Roberts. The panel will demonstrate the features and functionality available on the project website to scholars of 18th Century correspondence and explore a range of topics including the relationship between James Beattie and Elizabeth Montagu, James Beattie and his subscribers and the significance of the Dutch Enlightenment. The project will also introduce for the first time freely available facsimile copies of over 3,000 of Montagu’s letters from the Huntington archive.
Professor Nicole Pohl (Oxford Brookes University), EMCO Editor-in-Chief, works on eighteenth-century English literature with a particular interest in women’s letters and literature. She has published and edited books on women’s utopian writing in the seventeenth and eighteenth century, European salons and epistolarity.
Professor Caroline Franklin is Principal Investigator of EMCO. She is a graduate of the Universities of London and Cardiff, and a Fellow of the English Association. She is an expert on eighteenth and nineteenth-century literature with a particular interest in women writing.
Joanna Barker (Durham University), Honorary Research Fellow of the Institute of Medieval and Early Modern Studies and EMCO Project Manager, established the Elizabeth Montagu’s Correspondence Online (EMCO) charitable trust, seeding the EMCO project.
Dr Elizabeth Eger (King’s College, London), EMCO Consultant Editor, her research belongs to the field of interdisciplinary cultural history of the long 18th century. She has a particular interest in women’s writing, poetry, visual culture and the conceptual history of ‘luxury’.
Dr. Joost Hengstmengel is academic director of the Erasmus Economics & Theology Institute at Erasmus University Rotterdam and lecturer at the Theological University Kampen, the Netherlands.
Dr Anna Louise Senkiw (Oxford Brookes University), EMCO Research Assistant, has just completed her thesis entitled “Made in the Media: Actresses, Celebrity and the Periodical Press in the Late Eighteenth-Century” under Professor Ros Ballaster at the University of Oxford and is currently working on turning it into a book.
Dr Jack Orchard (Swansea University), EMCO Research Assistant, has recently completed a PhD thesis on “Reading and Sociability in the Correspondence Networks of Elizabeth Montagu and Friends” through a Collaborative Doctoral Award between Swansea University and Electronic Enlightenment (EE) at the Bodleian Library in Oxford.
Alexander Roberts is Research Data and Digital Humanities Manager at Swansea University and EMCO Technical Consultant and Developer. He has a background in Ethnomusicology and a wide-ranging set of digital preservation and scholarship experience and has co-developed previous digital editions including The Poems of Guto’r Glyn and The works of Dafydd ap Gwilym.
'Many Rivers to Cross:' Dylan Moore in conversation with Jon Gower
Thursday 29th April
Many Rivers to Cross is the debut novel from Dylan Moore, editor of the welsh agenda, and Hay Festival International Fellow. Written following a period volunteering at the Sanctuary Project in Newport, and partly based on interviews with asylum seekers and refugees, the novel traces a series of journeys – migrations across time and space – from the streets of Pillgwenlly, Newport to the ‘Jungle’ camp at Calais, and from Ethiopia to the island of Lampedusa.
About the Author
Dylan Moore has worked as a magazine editor, comprehensive school teacher, refugee support worker and chip shop counter assistant. His first book was Driving Home Both Ways, a collection of travel essays; his journalism has appeared in Lonely Planet, Vanity Fair, Times Educational Supplement and on BBC Radio 4. He is a Hay Festival International Fellow.
Cultural Institute 'Literary Salon Series'
'Child Holocaust Survivors:' Stories and Silences - Dr Rebecca Clifford
Wednesday 28th April
What circumstances shape what we can and cannot say when we tell the stories of our lives? In this talk, Rebecca Clifford will examine seventy-five years of oral history with child survivors of the Holocaust, considering how child survivors told their stories in changing historical contexts through the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries – and probing the connection between acts of speaking and later memories. This talk will be of interest not only to teachers and students of the Holocaust, but to anyone interested in storytelling, oral history, and the question of how we make sense of our earliest memories.
Rebecca Clifford is Associate Professor of Modern History at Swansea University. Her recent book on the postwar lives of child Holocaust survivors, 'Survivors: Children's Lives After the Holocaust' (Yale University Press 2020), has been nominated for Britain's top non-fiction awards, long-listed for the Wingate Literary Prize, and named a Book of the Year 2020 by the Telegraph. She is now working on a book on the ‘Lingfield’ children, a group of child survivors brought to Britain in 1945 and 1946 who were cared for – and closely observed – by Anna Freud and her psychoanalytic circle. Her recent research has been funded by the British Academy, the Leverhulme Trust, and the
Holocaust Educational Foundation.
UCL Centre for Holocaust Education
'Cult Cinema': Howard David Ingham in conversation with Eve Elizabeth Moriarty
Thursday 25 March 2021
Howard David Ingham (author of the Bram Stoker-nominated We Don't Go Back: A Watcher's Guide to Folk Horror) is proud to announce the launch of their new book, CULT CINEMA: A Personal exploration of Sects, Brainwashing and Bad Religion in Film and Television.
The launch event will begin with a reading from and discussion of the book, as well as Howard's recent career, with Digital Humanities Coordinator Eve Moriarty. There will be a Q&A and a chance to buy the book, including a launch-only digital package which won't be available outside of the launch event.
This event is brought to you by Swansea University Digital Humanities Lab in partnership with the Cultural Institute.
'Somos Sacrificables': Natural Resources, Sustainability & the Clean Economy - Oliver Balch
Thursday 11th March
Introduced by Dr Lloyd Davies
The tale of resource extraction in South America is as an age-old story. Recent decades have seen a new chapter begin to open as the region’s governments seek to recast extractivism as an engine for domestic development. This neo-extractivist turn may well generate macro and microeconomic benefits for host countries but it also comes with high social and environmental costs. The impacts of lithium mining provide an illustrative and timely case in point. Exponential demand for lithium-ion batteries is driving a mining boom in the fragile Atacama region of Chile, Argentina and Bolivia. To secure European supply, moves are now afoot to expand lithium production into Portugal. Through the lens of this rush for “white oil”, this webinar will explore three core questions: what are the costs of neo-extractivism in South America, how are these legitimised, and what (if anything) can be done to resist?
Oliver Balch is an independent journalist, specialising on business’s role in society. Currently based in Portugal, he is a regular contributor to The Guardian, The Times, and the FT, as well as other UK and international media. Oliver completed a PhD at Cambridge University’s Centre of Latin American Studies in 2018, focusing on the role of corporate ethics, foreign investment, and neo-extractivism in Uruguay. Oliver is the author of three travel books, including Viva South America! His latest book project focuses on Amazonia.
www.oliverbalch.com
'International Women's Day Poetry Celebration' - Lizzie Fincham and Natalie Ann Holborow
Monday 8th March
Contained in Ice by Lizzie Fincham
Poignant, elegant and timely, Lizzie Fincham's acute senses and imagistic rhythms give us glimpses beneath the surface of life, to the deeper connections. And always, running through the beauty and the evocation of the natural world, are warnings: 'The woods are turning to smoke'; 'As it always has, the bell tolls'… The delicacy of the poetry belies the magnitude of the themes: the losses and the hope — Contained in Ice contains 'All the small stuff. All the big stuff.'
Small by Natalie Ann Holborow
We all have our favourite demons. Weaved throughout poems on mythology, literary figures and other shores, the narrator is haunted by her biggest demon of all: the gargantuan Small. Told with rawness and honesty, the secretive nature of living with an eating disorder is yanked out into the open and given physical form and voice. Through relationship breakdowns, bath-times, the cacophonous dazzle of Delhi and the fug of hospital waiting rooms, Small is there, slyly riding on the shoulders of a woman running for miles to get away ‒ yet forever haunted by a shadow far larger than her own.
Author Biographies
Gower born poet Lizzie Fincham is currently studying for a PhD in Creative Writing at Swansea University. She has had 80 poems published in various journals and collections including New Welsh Review, Poetry Wales, North, French Literary Review, New Zealand Review. Lizzie has been shortlisted for many prizes, including the prestigious Bridport Poetry Prize on three occasions. In 2017 she was awarded First prize for Brexit Blues in Brighton Poetry Competition. Her first collection Green Figs and Blue Jazz was published by Cinnamon Press in 2017. Her latest pamphlet, Contained in Ice, was published by Cinnamon Press in 2020.
Natalie Ann Holborow is an award-winning writer whose debut collection, And Suddenly You Find Yourself, was launched at the International Kolkata Literary Festival and listed as Wales Arts Review’s ‘Best of 2017’. She is co-editor of the Cheval anthology. Winner of the 2015 Terry Hetherington Award and a recent finalist in the Cursed Murphy Spoken Word competition, her second book Small (Parthian) and collaborative pamphlet with Mari Ellis Dunning The Wrong Side of the Looking Glass (Black Rabbit Press) were both published in 2020.
Cultural Institute 'Literary Salon Series'
'The New Face of Russian Literature' - Professor Aleksey Varlamov
Wednesday 17th February
THIS EVENT WILL BE CARRIED OUT IN THE MEDIUM OF RUSSIAN, WITH SIMULTANEOUS ENGLISH TRANSLATION
Russian literature is going through a unique period of complete freedom and independence from authorities in history. In this lecture, Professor Aleksey Varlamov will focus on new trends in Russian literature, including the role of the writer as storyteller rather than as prophet or ideologist, as well as the current literary landscape in Russia, with a focus on non-fiction, biography and the status of movements such as Realism, Post-Realism and Postmodernism. The extent to which we can comprehend the present through the works of Zakhar Prilepin, R. Senchin, A. Salnikov and Grigorij Sluzhitel will also be discussed.
Professor Aleksey Varlamov is Rector of the Maxim Gorky Institute of Literature and Creative Writing, Moscow. He is also a prominent writer, publicist and researcher of the history of 20th Century Russian literature and his books have been translated into several languages.
The event is part of the UK-Russia Creative Bridge Programme 2020-21 organised by the Cultural and Education Section of the British Embassy in Moscow with the support of the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.
Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation
The Maxim Gorky Institute of Literature and Creative Writing Moscow
'Advent' - Jane Fraser
Thursday 11th February
Book Synopsis
Winter, 1904, and feisty twenty-one-year-old Ellen has been summoned back from her new life in Hoboken, New Jersey, to the family farm on windswept Gower, in a last bid to prevent the impending death of her alcoholic father. On her return, she finds the family in disarray. Ailing William is gambling away large swathes of Thomas land; frustrated Eleanor is mourning the husband she once knew; and Ellen’s younger twin brothers face difficult choices. Ellen, tasked with putting her family’s lives in order, finds herself battling one impossible decision after another. Resourceful, passionate, and forthright, can she remain in Gower, where being female still brings with it so many limitations? Can she endure being so close to her lost love? Will she choose home and duty, or excitement and opportunity across the Atlantic?
About the Author
Jane Fraser lives, work and writes in the Gower peninsula, south Wales, in a house facing the sea. Her first collection of short fiction, ‘The South Westerlies’ was published by SALT in 2019. Her debut novel, ‘Advent’ is forthcoming from HONNO, the UK’s longest-standing independent women’s press, in January 2021. In 2017 she was a finalist in the Manchester Fiction Prize; and in 2018 a prize winner in the Fish Memoir Prize’. She is an alumni of Swansea University with an MA (distinction) and PhD in Creative Writing. She was a Hay Festival Writer at Work in 2018 and 2019. She is grandmother to Megan, Florence and Alice.
www.janefraserwriter.com
Twitter @jfraserwriter
In association with Honno Press
'Poetry of the 19th Century: Alexander S. Pushkin' - Professor Elena A. Keshokova
5th February 2021
Alexander S. Pushkin was called the “Sun of Russian Poetry” by his contemporaries. The poet had an extraordinary pedigree. His mother's great-grandfather, one of the most educated people of his time, descended from a noble princely Abyssinian family and served faithfully to the Russian tsar Peter the Great. The biographies of Pushkin’s ancestors are as interesting as the novels of the 18-19th centuries. Pushkin wrote:
My pride of blood I have subdued;
I'm but an unknown singer
Simply Pushkin, not Moussin,
My strength is mine, not from court:
I am a writer, a citizen.
The prominent Russian writer Ivan Turgenev maintained that one of the distinctive features of Pushkin's poetry was graceful and smart simplicity. In his writing he was engaged in a gratifying creative dialogue with Western poets - Shakespeare, Voltaire, Byron, and Walter Scott among them.
Pushkin’s polyphonic lyrics largely influenced a great number of Russian poets and created a new poetic language. The poet was also an efficient historian: his heroes of Russian antiquity laid the foundations of the Russian historical novel.
The poet’s dynamic descriptions of various characters of his life and times helped create a highly animated image of Russia which made it possible to name his main work Eugene Onegin “the encyclopedia of Russian life."
The lecture will also explain why Pushkin's poetry is so difficult to translate, and his writing has not become a revelation to Western readership.
The event is part of the UK-Russia Creative Bridge Programme 2020-21 organised by the Cultural and Education Section of the British Embassy in Moscow with the support of the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.
Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation
The Maxim Gorky Institute of Literature and Creative Writing Moscow
'The Book of Jem' - Carole Hailey
28th January 2021
Book Synopsis
In the aftermath of catastrophic religious wars, God has been banned. As snow begins to fall, a young woman – Jem – arrives in Underhill. The isolated community offers her shelter, unwittingly unleashing events that threaten their very existence. Jem announces that she has been sent to Underhill by God to prepare the villagers to fulfil a devastating purpose. Some believe she is a prophet and defy the law to join her God's Threads religion. Others are certain she is lying. With their fragile community beginning to fracture, Eileen, the first and most devoted of the believers, decides to record the birth of this new religion in her own Book of Jem. As God’s Threads gather for the apocalypse, the words Eileen has written will determine the fate of Underhill and, ultimately, of Jem herself. But can Eileen be trusted to tell the truth? And how can anyone know what to believe?
About the Author
After years of failing to write in the middle of the night, Carole Hailey abandoned a lucrative career as a lawyer to become an impoverished novelist. She subsequently accumulated an MA in Creative Writing from Goldsmiths and a PhD from Swansea University in 2020. Carole was shortlisted for the Bridport Prize First Novel Award 2020 and is a London Library Emerging Writer 2020/21. The Book of Jem is her first novel.
In association with Watermark Press
Cultural Institute 'Literary Salon Series'
26th January 2021 - 'Crime Fiction and Legal Truth'
In this special online event, a panel of experts in crime fiction, thriller writing and Law discuss the intersection between crime fiction and legal truth. What is the relationship between crime fiction and true crime? And to what extent must the crime writer become a legal expert? A session full of suspense focusing on European crime fiction featuring eminent barrister and Head of Swansea University's Hillary Rodham Clinton School of Law, Professor Elwen Evans KC, along with Swansea-born Philip Gwynne Jones, author of the hugely successful "Nathan Sutherland" crime novels (set in Venice), and translator and editor Dr Kat Hall, a specialist in German thriller writing and creator of 'Mrs Peabody Investigates.' In conversation with Professor D.J. Britton, Playwright and Head of English Literature and Creative Writing at Swansea University.
The Panelists
Professor Elwen Evans KC is Pro Vice Chancellor and Executive Dean for the faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences. She also holds the University portfolio for Welsh Language and Culture.
Elwen read Law at Girton College, Cambridge graduating with a double first: M.A. (Cantab). She was fortunate to receive a range of Scholarships from her College, University and professional body. On graduating she attended the Inns of Court School of Law and was called to the Bar by Gray’s Inn in 1980. She was appointed Queen’s Counsel in 2002. Elwen has enjoyed a very successful career as a barrister choosing to practice mainly in Wales. She has undertaken a wide range of legal work, specialising in criminal law at trial and appellate levels. Her work has included many serious, complex, sensitive and high profile cases such as leading the prosecution team in the April Jones case and the defence team in the Gleision mine disaster case. She sits as a Crown Court Recorder having been appointed in 2001. She was Head of Iscoed Chambers for over 15 years, stepping down on her appointment to Swansea University. She is a Bencher of her Inn, has been honoured by Gorsedd y Beirdd for her services to Law in Wales and was a Commissioner on the Commission on Justice in Wales. She has served on a wide range of external bodies and committees reflecting her areas of professional experience and interest. In 2018 she was in the top 10 of a list celebrating 100 of Wales’ most inspirational women.
Elwen joined Swansea University in 2015 when she was appointed as Head of the College of Law & Criminology where she supported its growth and transformation into an exciting and dynamic centre for learning, teaching, research, impact and engagement. Today, the University’s Hillary Rodham Clinton School of Law is recognised as being at the forefront of innovation in legal education and practice.
Philip Gwynne Jones was born in Swansea in 1966, and now works as a writer, teacher and translator in Venice. His first novel, “The Venetian Game”, was Waterstones Thriller of the Month for March 2018, and a Times Top 5 bestseller. His most recent novel, “Venetian Gothic”, is now available, with a further four titles scheduled. He has written for the Sunday Times and the Big Issue, and is a frequent guest on BBC Radio Wales. In his spare time he enjoys cooking, art, classical music and opera; and can occasionally be seen and heard singing bass with the Cantori Veneziani.
Philip is published by Little, Brown under the Constable imprint
Dr Kat Hall is a translator and editor. She is an Honorary Research Associate in Modern Languages at Swansea University, where she worked as a lecturer for many years. She is the editor of Crime Fiction in German: Der Krimi (UWP 2016) and runs the ‘Mrs Peabody Investigates’ crime blog. She is currently translating Punishment, by German barrister turned crime writer Ferdinand von Schirach.
The event is part of the UK-Russia Creative Bridge Programme 2020-21 organised by the Cultural and Education Section of the British Embassy in Moscow with the support of the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.
Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation
The Maxim Gorky Institute of Literature and Creative Writing Moscow
20th January 2021 - 'Anna Karenina: Screen Adaptations of the Novel' - Andrey Gelasimov
‘Anna Karenina: Screen Adaptations of the Novel’ - Andrey Gelasimov
The first screen adaptation of “Anna Karenina” was produced in the very beginning of the 20th century. Since then this Russian novel became one of the most popular sources for inspiration of cinematographers all over the world. The most beautiful and absolutely legendary actresses were involved in visualisation of that stunning and suffering character created by Leo Tolstoy almost a century and a half ago. During our conversation we’ll try to understand reasons of such durable attraction comparing different film versions between each other and the novel itself.
The event is part of the UK-Russia Creative Bridge Programme 2020-21 organised by the Cultural and Education Section of the British Embassy in Moscow with the support of the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.
Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation
The Maxim Gorky Institute of Literature and Creative Writing Moscow
'Max Porter on Myth, Hybridity and Voice'
Thursday 14th January
In this special online event, Max Porter talks about his career as an editor, bookseller and critically-acclaimed British writer, before discussing the changing shape of the English novel, myth and modern forms, his bestselling works and approach to writing and the relationship between literature and literacy.
The event will include special readings by Max from his award-winning works Grief is the Thing with Feathers and Lanny, as well as his new book The Death of Francis Bacon, 'an attempt to write as painting, not about it'.
In conversation with Dr Elaine Canning, Head of Cultural Engagement and Development at Swansea University.
Award-winning Max Porter is one of Britain’s most original and innovative writers. Max's first novel, Grief Is the Thing with Feathers, won the International Dylan Thomas Prize, the Sunday Times/Peters, Fraser + Dunlop Young Writer of the Year, the Europese Literatuurprijs and the BAMB Readers' Award, and was shortlisted for the Guardian First Book Award and the Goldsmiths Prize. It has been translated into twenty-nine languages. Enda Walsh’s stage adaptation starting Cillian Murphy toured in 2019. Max's second novel Lanny (Faber, 2019) was a Sunday Times Top 10 bestseller and longlisted for the 2019 Booker Prize. His highly anticipated third book, The Death of Francis Bacon, will be published by Faber in January 2021. Max lives in Bath with his family.
‘It’s hard to express how much I loved Lanny. Books this good don’t come along very often. It’s a novel like no other, an exhilarating, disquieting, joyous read. It will reach into your chest and take hold of your heart. It’s a novel to press into the hands of everyone you know and say, read this.’ - MAGGIE O’FARRELL
A luminous reading experience - (Grief is the Thing with Feathers) (TLS)
An agile, life-affirming account of mourning. (Grief is the Thing with Feathers) (Sunday Times)
The event is part of the UK-Russia Creative Bridge Programme 2020-21 organised by the Cultural and Education Section of the British Embassy in Moscow with the support of the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.
Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation
The Maxim Gorky Institute of Literature and Creative Writing Moscow
2020 Events
The Annual Richard Burton Lecture: 'Imperial Intimacies: A Tale of Two Islands - Prof Hazel V. Carby'
10th December 2020
This year’s Richard Burton Annual Lecture will be delivered by Professor Hazel V. Carby: eminent cultural critic, pioneer in the fields of black feminism, multiculturalism in Britain and African-American studies. Professor Carby is a co-author of The Empire Strikes Back and author of Cultures in Babylon: Black Britain and African America, Race Men, and Reconstructing Womanhood. Hazel Carby is the Charles C. and Dorothea S. Dilley Professor Emeritus of African American Studies and Professor Emeritus of American Studies Yale University and a Fellow of the Royal Society for the Arts.
In her latest book, Imperial Intimacies: A Tale of Two Islands, Carby moves between the present and past, tracing the intimate entanglements between the twin legacies of her Jamaican father and Welsh mother and placing her own life within the wider history of Empire and the transatlantic slave economy. The volume won this year’s British Academy Nayef Al-Rodhan Prize for Global Cultural Understanding, 2020
Professor Carby will read from Imperial Intimacies before discussing her life and career in conversation with Professor Daniel G. Williams, director of the Richard Burton Centre for the Study of Wales at Swansea University.
'Margery Kempe’s Spiritual Medicine' - Laura Kalas
9th December 2020
Book Synopsis
Born in 1373, Margery Kempe is the writer of the first known female-authored autobiography in the English language. As an effusive, often rambunctious, visionary woman living in the lay world, her particular mode of spirituality was not always well-received in a cultural milieu that frequently pathologized, or deemed heretical, ‘excessive’ female expression. Margery Kempe’s Spiritual Medicine: Suffering, Transformation and the Life-Course (D.S. Brewer) is the first full-length study of The Book of Margery Kempe from a medical humanities perspective. Harnessing the ubiquitous medieval notion of Christ the Physician, it offers a new way of reading the Book as a narrative of Kempe's own engagement with the medical paradigms of which she has previously been a passive subject. Focusing on the interactions of medicine, mysticism and reproduction as a feminist project, the book is a broad traverse through the life course, exploring Kempe's persistent attendance to her mystical body and refusal to compromise her instinct to authentically show how she feels.
About the Author
Laura Kalas is a Lecturer in Medieval literature in the Department of English Literature and Creative Writing at Swansea University. She has published in several academic journals, contributed to The Literary Encyclopedia, and has articles in The Conversation and The Independent. Her work on the medical recipe at the end of The Book of Margery Kempe has been featured in The Guardian and in the BBC History Magazine. Margery Kempe’s Spiritual Medicine is her first book.
In association with Boydell and Brewer.
'The Murenger and Other Stories' - Jon Gower
3rd December 2020
‘In The Murenger and Other Stories’, Jon Gower’s fifth collection of short fiction, he has unleashed a motley crew of rambunctious characters, who experience a variety of unfortunate situations, either due to their own destructive tendencies, to events beyond their control or to the vagaries of others. These unique stories are a melting pot of wild imagination and inventive language, conjured up with a drop of magic realism, a hint of the surreal and a soupçon of fable.’
- Madeleine d’Arcy, author of Waiting for the Bullet
About the Author
Jon Gower has over thirty books to his name, in Welsh and English, including ‘The Story of Wales,’ which accompanied the landmark BBC series, ‘An Island Called Smith,’ which gained the John Morgan Travel Writing Award, and ‘Y Storïwr,’ which won the Wales Book of the Year award. He is a former BBC Wales arts and media correspondent and was for many years the presenter of Radio Wales’ arts’ programme ‘First Hand.’ He lives in Cardiff with his wife Sarah and daughters Elena and Onwy.
Cultural Institute 'Literary Salon Series'
27th November 2020 - ‘Our Planet: Too Big to Fail’: A new film inspired by the 'Our Planet' Netflix series
Join us for this special online event featuring a screening of Our Planet: Too Big to Fail and a Q&A with Swansea University Alumni Bevis Watts and Rhiannon Shah
Hosted by Swansea University’s Cultural Institute in collaboration with the Alumni and Development Office and Taliesin Arts Centre.
Inspired by the original Netflix Our Planet series, Our Planet: Too Big To Fail explores the risks of inaction, the impact of investing-as-usual, and the critical role the finance sector can play in the fight for our world. The film combines spectacular footage of the natural world from the Our Planet series with thought-provoking interviews from some of the most influential names in the sector like Sir David Attenborough, Mark Carney, Catherine Howarth, Gillian Tett and Swansea University Alumnus Bevis Watts.
Welcome and Introduction from Professor Elwen Evans KC - Executive Dean PVC, Faculty of Humanities & Social Sciences.
Plus Q&A chaired by Mike Buckle, Professor of Finance, School of Management - with Swansea University Alumni Bevis Watts, CEO at Triodos Bank UK who features in the film and Rhiannon Shah, Business Lead on the Our Planet Team at WWF-UK who helped to create it.
'Entering the Yellow House - Alan Bilton'
26th November 2020
Book Synopsis
Central Russia, 1919, a sanatorium cut off by the chaos of the Russian civil war. The murder of the chief doctor sets in motion a nightmarish series of events involving mysterious experiments, the secret police, the Tsar’s double, an enigmatic ‘visitor’, giant corpses, possessed cats, sorcery, and the overwhelming madness of war, in this fantastical and wildly exuberant historical novel.
Reviews
"A bold and confident novel that throws us into the deep end of post-revolutionary Russian life with fervour and wit. There are knowing nods to Gogol and Bulgakov but the voice is entirely original, with a gem of a phrase on every page. I love the quizzical, querulous, dry voice and it’s a satisfying whilst sometimes disorientating experience... the characters are larger than life, but the mud is real. Alan Bilton has a real talent for the unexpected left-hand turn, with lines that turn on a sixpence and surreal narrative twists. It reads like a very modern translation of a 19th century Russian classic – if that sounds like your kind of thing, you will love this book." - Mark Blayney
Cultural Institute 'Literary Salon Series'
'Living Histories Cymru Present: A Moral Amazon: The Story of Miss Amy Dillwyn'
6th November 2020
Born a tomboy in Swansea, South Wales in 1845, Amy Dillwyn spent many years searching for a meaningful existence. As a young woman Amy was brought low by unrequited love for her friend Olive and blocked ambitions. She later revisited her experiences in a series of best selling novels. ‘Jill’, ‘The Rebecca Rioter’ and A Burglary are entertaining reads, published by Honno Classics.
Later in life Amy would become a famous public figure in Wales and featured in the British and American press, taking over her father’s business, fighting for women’s rights and standing for public office. We tell the story of this remarkable woman, and her doubts and fears as she struggles for a meaningful place in the world. But she never forgot her one true love, the girl who would not love her back.
Amy Dillwyn is played by Helen Sandler (in costume)
Narrator: Jane Hoy
A Moral Amazon is brought to you by Living Histories Cymru from our series Queer Tales From Wales. Living Histories Cymru perform stories about the often hidden or ignored history of LGBTQ+ people in Wales in an entertaining and accessible way. Our shows have been enjoyed all over the UK including Y Senedd Cardiff, Swansea Waterfront Museum, Brighton Museum, The People’s Museum Manchester, The Museum of Liverpool, Aberystwyth Arts Centre, a story walk in Aberystwyth for Amgueddfa Ceredigion Museum and most recently on line for the Women’s Archive Wales.
‘Cross Currents: The Fiction of History' - Dai Smith CBE
4th November 2020
Dai Smith reflects on the intellectual cross currents of his life as both historian and novelist as he launches his latest novel, The Crossing, in conversation with Jon Gower.
The novel builds upon and completes Dai’s trilogy on the fictive history of Industrial South Wales. The Crossing, polyphonic and multi-vocal, is a startling and provocative mix of the actual and imaginative in its intertwining of individual destinies, real and fictional ones, with a society’s fated and shaping direction.
Dai is now writing a work of memory making which, he says, is neither autobiography nor memoir but, rather, both forms held in suspension in the mind of recall.
In association with PARTHIAN
Cultural Institute 'Literary Salon Series'
'New World, New Beginnings' - Online Poetry Workshops
13th October 2020
How can poetry help us to connect with others and with our world at a time of uncertainty and physical distancing?
Workshops will be led by critically-acclaimed poet and Swansea University Professor in Creativity Owen Sheers who will be joined by award-winning poets Eric Ngalle Charles (workshop 1) and Natalie Ann Holborow (workshop 2).
The Amy Dillyn Lecture 2020: 'Avatars: LGBT Storytelling by Amy Dillwyn'
8th October 2020
In this talk, Professor Kirsti Bohata introduces Swansea writer, Amy Dillwyn, and her radical fiction. In her novels, Amy Dillwyn created male avatars (often criminals) to allow her to explore genderqueer identities and lesbian desires. Later, these avatars become female characters (still criminal) who occupy male storylines. This talk is suitable for a general audience and all are welcome.
'Skirrid Hill' - Owen Sheers
3rd June 2020
In this podcast, Owen Sheers reads from and discusses his award-winning poetry collection, Skirrid Hill.
Skirrid Hill revolves around the two poems Y Gaer and The Hillfort, the titles themselves suggesting the linguistic divide in Wales, from poems concerned with childhood, a Welsh landscape, and family, to a more outward-looking vision both geographically and historically.
Swansea University Centenary Lecture: 'The Perseverance' - Raymond Antrobus
26th May 2020
A special evening of readings and conversation with poet Raymond Antrobus, winner of the 2019 Ted Hughes Award, Sunday Times Young Writers Award and the Rathbones Folio Prize for his debut collection The Perseverance. Arresting, challenging and generous Antrobus’s poems move through continents and history to create a stunning collection of verve, empathy and craft that encompasses issues of deafness, masculinity, dementia, race and heritage.