Where the Folk: A Welsh Folklore Road Trip
Autor Russ Williamsen Limba Engleză Hardback – 23 dec 2024
Russ Williams was raised on Welsh stories, like the one about a mountain that would send you mad or turn you into a gifted poet if you camped out on it, or the one about the lost civilization drowned by the sea, and the one about the bottomless lake leading down to the Welsh Otherworld. Stories of witches and giants and heroic kings, dragons and mad doctors, ghostly women, giant beaver monsters, vampire furniture, and pirate-fighting monks.
As entertaining as it is informative, Where the Folk follows Russ Williams as he travels in Griff, his creaky red Fiesta, in search of places associated with Wales’s legends, folklore, and urban myths. In this joyful travelogue, not only does Russ recount some of Wales’s most interesting stories, but he also explores the origins behind the myths, talking to experts and storytellers to find out how and why they might have come about, and what they tell us about Wales past and present.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781915279705
ISBN-10: 1915279704
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 135 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: University of Wales Press
Colecția Calon
ISBN-10: 1915279704
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 135 x 216 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: University of Wales Press
Colecția Calon
Notă biografică
Russ Williams grew up in Caernarfon in North Wales and now lives in Cardiff. He runs two blogs, Brawd Autistico, which documents his life with an autistic brother, and Where the Folk, about Welsh folklore and urban myths.
Cuprins
Pronunciation Guide
Foreword
List of illustrations
Some main characters
Prologue: Rebecca’s roots
Part One: Rebecca rises
1 The final straw
2 Respectable radicals, rough music
3 Men in the middle
4 ‘Faithful to death’
Part Two: Taking the reins
5 A thorough revolution
6 Lovers of justice
7 Rebecca in the spotlight
Part Three: The summer of discontent
8 A losing battle
9 All but open rebellion
10 Rebecca goes south
11 Organised chaos
12 Ladies of letters
13 Out of the shadows
14 ‘More than one hundred thousand strong’
Part Four: At the point of a bayonet if necessary
15 Rebecca rules
16 Raising the stakes
17 Death at Hendy
18 Are the government mad enough?
Part Five: ‘We are all of us Rebeccas’
19 ‘Becca there is now dead’
20 From lawbreakers to legends
21 Throwing open the books
21 What Becca did next
Foreword
List of illustrations
Some main characters
Prologue: Rebecca’s roots
Part One: Rebecca rises
1 The final straw
2 Respectable radicals, rough music
3 Men in the middle
4 ‘Faithful to death’
Part Two: Taking the reins
5 A thorough revolution
6 Lovers of justice
7 Rebecca in the spotlight
Part Three: The summer of discontent
8 A losing battle
9 All but open rebellion
10 Rebecca goes south
11 Organised chaos
12 Ladies of letters
13 Out of the shadows
14 ‘More than one hundred thousand strong’
Part Four: At the point of a bayonet if necessary
15 Rebecca rules
16 Raising the stakes
17 Death at Hendy
18 Are the government mad enough?
Part Five: ‘We are all of us Rebeccas’
19 ‘Becca there is now dead’
20 From lawbreakers to legends
21 Throwing open the books
21 What Becca did next
Recenzii
"‘Where the Folk’ reveals how stories might have evolved and the pitfalls of over-analysis. They are stories after all, kept alive for new audiences with constant refreshing.
It is this continuous endeavour I find touching. From Victorian-era entrepreneurs eager to entice tourists, the Welsh Language Board teaming up with Tesco to promote Santes Dwynwen, Pat and Ellie working hard to maintain the custom of the Mari Lwyd (despite the weight of the skull), or a host of creative primary school teachers, Russ Williams reveals a rich storytelling tradition in which ‘Where the Folk’ absolutely merits its place."
It is this continuous endeavour I find touching. From Victorian-era entrepreneurs eager to entice tourists, the Welsh Language Board teaming up with Tesco to promote Santes Dwynwen, Pat and Ellie working hard to maintain the custom of the Mari Lwyd (despite the weight of the skull), or a host of creative primary school teachers, Russ Williams reveals a rich storytelling tradition in which ‘Where the Folk’ absolutely merits its place."