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A Time to Laugh (Paperback, UK ed.)
Loot Price: R271
Discovery Miles 2 710
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A Time to Laugh (Paperback, UK ed.)
Series: Library of Wales, 39
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List price R309
Loot Price R271
Discovery Miles 2 710
You Save R38 (12%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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'Tumult and disorder, frustration, wages, strikes, riots, debts -
were these to be his world? Ugliness, squalor and meanness was
their portion. And yet, and yet ...They had the full tarnished
brilliance of life in them. And he began to laugh, with a soft low
sound, half caught in his throat.' The second novel in the Rhondda
Trilogy - 'the most sustained literary examination of Welsh
industrial history ever published and certainly the least
ideologically distorted' - A Time to Laugh (1937) is set in a
coal-mining valley on the eve of the 20th century. It is set
against a background of industrial unrest and social change. The
old certainties of pastoral Rhondda have given way to a new age of
capital and steam, and life in the Valley has been transformed by
strike, riot and gruelling poverty. The central character is Dr
Tudor Morris, whose ancient estate has been sold to one of the
railway companies opening up the Rhondda for the purpose of
extracting coal and taking it down the Valley to the docks in
Cardiff. The doctor abandons his class and seeks personal salvation
among the poor. Although expressly radical in its sympathy for the
working class, the novel also finds a place for local tradespeople,
the small shopocracy to which Davies's family (grocers in
Blaenclydach near Tonypandy) belonged: they remain neutral,
non-political, with their livelihoods threatened, hapless
bystanders in the social upheaval of the day. Like Rhys Davies
himself, they are mere observers of the strike, which is based on
the Haulers' Strike of 1893 and the Cambrian Combine Lock-out, here
set in December 1899, that led to the famous Tonypandy Riots of
1910. The novel's emphasis is on collective responsibility rather
than personal revolt as depicted in Davies's earlier novels, though
he remains wary of Socialist ideology and the mentality it breeds.
As for the Communists, they are seen as propagandists rather than
the socially vital force they actually were in places like 'red
Rhondda'.
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