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(Lynette writing about) Nesta: Recollection, Reclamation and Reconstruction in Lynette Roberts's Lost Novel. / Hughes, Daniel.
In: International Journal of Welsh Writing in English, Vol. 5, No. 2, 20.12.2018.

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Hughes D. (Lynette writing about) Nesta: Recollection, Reclamation and Reconstruction in Lynette Roberts's Lost Novel. International Journal of Welsh Writing in English. 2018 Dec 20;5(2). doi: 10.16995/wwe.377

Author

Hughes, Daniel. / (Lynette writing about) Nesta : Recollection, Reclamation and Reconstruction in Lynette Roberts's Lost Novel. In: International Journal of Welsh Writing in English. 2018 ; Vol. 5, No. 2.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - (Lynette writing about) Nesta

T2 - Recollection, Reclamation and Reconstruction in Lynette Roberts's Lost Novel

AU - Hughes, Daniel

PY - 2018/12/20

Y1 - 2018/12/20

N2 - This article furthers the nascent re- discovery of the Argentine- Welsh writer Lynette Roberts, whose poems returned to print in 2005. Written by Roberts in Llanybri, Carmarthenshire, during the 1940s, ‘Nesta’ is an unevenly experimental re- construction of the life of the Welsh medieval princess Nest ferch Rhys, and was read by figures such as Robert Graves and T.S. Eliot, who considered the novel for publication at Faber. This essay argues that the triple aims of ‘Nesta’ are as follows: to recollect the Welsh woman Nest ferch Rhys and the background of her life; to reclaim Nest from these male- dominated histories; and to ultimately reconstruct Nest as the character Nesta. In analysing this tripartite strategy, this article will demonstrate that Roberts’s text uses the intersection between history and imaginative speculation to position Nest, in the form of the character Nesta, as a woman of national and historical significance.

AB - This article furthers the nascent re- discovery of the Argentine- Welsh writer Lynette Roberts, whose poems returned to print in 2005. Written by Roberts in Llanybri, Carmarthenshire, during the 1940s, ‘Nesta’ is an unevenly experimental re- construction of the life of the Welsh medieval princess Nest ferch Rhys, and was read by figures such as Robert Graves and T.S. Eliot, who considered the novel for publication at Faber. This essay argues that the triple aims of ‘Nesta’ are as follows: to recollect the Welsh woman Nest ferch Rhys and the background of her life; to reclaim Nest from these male- dominated histories; and to ultimately reconstruct Nest as the character Nesta. In analysing this tripartite strategy, this article will demonstrate that Roberts’s text uses the intersection between history and imaginative speculation to position Nest, in the form of the character Nesta, as a woman of national and historical significance.

KW - Lynette Roberts

KW - women's writing

KW - modernism

KW - historical fiction

U2 - 10.16995/wwe.377

DO - 10.16995/wwe.377

M3 - Article

VL - 5

JO - International Journal of Welsh Writing in English

JF - International Journal of Welsh Writing in English

SN - 2053-1915

IS - 2

ER -