This article explores representations of Wales in W. G. Sebald’s novel Austerlitz (2001). It considers why the novel’s passages on Wales have often evaded scholarship on Sebald’s writing to date, and ways in which Austerlitz may seem eccentric to Welsh critical canons too. The article places Austerlitz in intertextual relationships with the literatures and cultural history of Wales and so uncovers some of the novel’s hidden Welsh references. In alluding to Evan Morgan, 2nd Viscount Tredegar for example, Austerlitz simultaneously turns away from Welsh history and reveals it in unexpected ways. The novel also calls to mind the nineteenth-century preacher John Elias in a way which offers an unusual perspective on Sebald’s poetics of coincidenc...
Writing Wales explores representations of Wales in English and Welsh literatures written across a br...
The present article was written as a chapter of a literary historical project which aims to present ...
Somewhat appropriately, considering the eccentric and dream-like style of much of his writing, Georg...
This article explores representations of Wales in W. G. Sebald’s novel Austerlitz (2001). It conside...
Since the late 1990s, W. G. Sebald’s innovative contribution to the genre of prose fiction has been ...
Likened to Proust, Gunter Grass, and Virginia Woolf, W. G. Sebald (1944-2001) is one of the most imp...
This article argues that George Borrow’s Wild Wales (1862) and O. M. Edwards’s Cartrefi Cymru (1896)...
textW.G. Sebald’s final novel Austerlitz is often framed as a work of “postmemorial” Holocaust ficti...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 82-84).The eponymous protagonist of Austerlitz, W.G. Seb...
This paper will evaluate the work of contemporary Welsh writer Owen Sheers in the light of a number...
Taking the development of picturesque tourism in Wales since the publication of William Gilpin’s Obs...
When the English poet and critic Matthew Arnold looked west from Llandudno in 1864 at a land 'where ...
Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 79-86).This dissertation utilises cert...
Taking the development of picturesque tourism in Wales since the publication of William Gilpin’s Obs...
Austerlitz was the German expatriate author W. G. Sebald's last book before his untimely death in 20...
Writing Wales explores representations of Wales in English and Welsh literatures written across a br...
The present article was written as a chapter of a literary historical project which aims to present ...
Somewhat appropriately, considering the eccentric and dream-like style of much of his writing, Georg...
This article explores representations of Wales in W. G. Sebald’s novel Austerlitz (2001). It conside...
Since the late 1990s, W. G. Sebald’s innovative contribution to the genre of prose fiction has been ...
Likened to Proust, Gunter Grass, and Virginia Woolf, W. G. Sebald (1944-2001) is one of the most imp...
This article argues that George Borrow’s Wild Wales (1862) and O. M. Edwards’s Cartrefi Cymru (1896)...
textW.G. Sebald’s final novel Austerlitz is often framed as a work of “postmemorial” Holocaust ficti...
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 82-84).The eponymous protagonist of Austerlitz, W.G. Seb...
This paper will evaluate the work of contemporary Welsh writer Owen Sheers in the light of a number...
Taking the development of picturesque tourism in Wales since the publication of William Gilpin’s Obs...
When the English poet and critic Matthew Arnold looked west from Llandudno in 1864 at a land 'where ...
Includes abstract.Includes bibliographical references (leaves 79-86).This dissertation utilises cert...
Taking the development of picturesque tourism in Wales since the publication of William Gilpin’s Obs...
Austerlitz was the German expatriate author W. G. Sebald's last book before his untimely death in 20...
Writing Wales explores representations of Wales in English and Welsh literatures written across a br...
The present article was written as a chapter of a literary historical project which aims to present ...
Somewhat appropriately, considering the eccentric and dream-like style of much of his writing, Georg...