21 research outputs found

    Special Libraries, September 1962

    Get PDF
    Volume 53, Issue 7https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1962/1006/thumbnail.jp

    Special Libraries, February 1964

    Get PDF
    Volume 55, Issue 2https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1964/1001/thumbnail.jp

    Special Libraries, May-June 1971

    Get PDF
    Volume 62, Issue 5-6https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1971/1004/thumbnail.jp

    Special Libraries, December 1970

    Get PDF
    Volume 61, Issue 10https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1970/1009/thumbnail.jp

    Special Libraries, July-August 1962

    Get PDF
    Volume 53, Issue 6https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/sla_sl_1962/1005/thumbnail.jp

    Feeding the hunger of history: society and politics in Dylan Thomas's prose and dramatic works

    Get PDF
    This thesis argues for a much more considered and nuanced reading of Dylan Thomas’s political outlook than extant criticism has tended to present. It makes a case for the reading of Thomas’s socialism as intrinsic to his ethical vision, and explores this through close analytical attention to his prose and dramatic work. It proceeds by considering how those political views were formed and reformed, and contextualises them alongside and against the political expressions of his contemporaries, notably the ‘Auden Group’. Particular attention is paid to the socialist undertones of Thomas’s film scripts and radio plays of the 1930s and 1940s, his radio broadcasts and short stories, and the argument is framed within, and draws substantially on, existing criticism. Socialism is explored here in both the strong, ideological sense, and in a more understated concern with the practices and interdependencies of the small communities that Thomas places at the heart of his creative work. The thesis concludes that Thomas largely rejected the more theoretical party politics of the Left in favour of an emotionally-direct expression of his political beliefs that aligned more closely with his ‘poetic’ voice, and that this approach was arrived at through his work as a short story writer and scriptwriter for film and radio. It argues that Under Milk Wood is, consequently, the most developed example of this style, and proposes a reading of the play against the backdrop of post-war recovery and renewal, drawing on Thomas’s political and social views.

    David Gascoyne : from darkness into light; a study of his poetry 1932-1950

    Get PDF
    The aim of this study is to show Gascoyne's development from precocious theorist and practitioner of Surrealism into a religious poet of major significance

    The Key 1968

    Get PDF
    Bowling Green State University 1968 Key Yearbookhttps://scholarworks.bgsu.edu/yearbooks/1087/thumbnail.jp

    Bowdoin Alumnus Volume 31 (1956-1957)

    Get PDF
    https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/alumni-magazines/1042/thumbnail.jp

    Bowdoin Alumnus Volume 36 (1961-1962)

    Get PDF
    https://digitalcommons.bowdoin.edu/alumni-magazines/1034/thumbnail.jp
    corecore