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Books by Dai Smith

Dai Smith has combined writing, politics, media production, teaching and public office in a manner reminiscent of an earlier time. Presently he combines Chair of the Arts Council of Wales with the Raymond Williams Research Chair for Cultural History at University of Wales, Swansea. Yet a listing of achievements and formal titles hides far more than it reveals and only takes its full significance if the life story in its history is addressed, albeit in the limited manner allowed in the space afforded here. Dai Smith was born in working class Rhondda following the end of World War Two - a fact perhaps more substantial than any in the life that has followed since. In 1945/6, the year of Dai Smith's birth, the coal-workers were achieving an aim that they had fought for since the last war; nationalisation of the mines. Celebrations of the event were captured in biography, lodge minutes, music, photography and fiction. To be born at this time was to be of a generation for whom the defeat of 1926 and what followed, was learned as part of the oral folklore of a place and people. Porth, where Dai Smith attended the County School, lies at the southern end of the Rhondda Valley, and employment had only returned to the area when government away in London decided more coal was needed to fight another war. Like those whose lives have been important for Dai Smith such as Gwyn Thomas, Gwyn Alf Williams and Raymond Williams, he too moved out from his community through the passage of formal learning. Beginning with Barry Grammar School, a path led to first Oxford, then New York and finally a thesis at Swansea. In Smith's own words, he went to Oxford to study literature and read history and to New York to study history and read literature. Such contrariness has been a hallmark of writing and career, where neither 'discipline' has been expressed in isolation from the other. The entwining goes deep into forms of writing in Wales and are essential to any understanding of Dai Smith and the formation from which he comes. Very different in effect has been the period in New York which has had a continued presence in Dai Smith's work where a curious lacuna has been the colonising impact of capitalist commercial culture which instead has been presented as a positive replacement for a mythic Welsh culture. Dai Smith returned to South Wales in 1968 and began a long partnership with the historian and educationalist Hywel Francis. The return was to more than a region, it was to the coalfield, its people, their institutions and common culture. The two men began the task of locating, retrieving, and sorting the disparate records of the South Wales Miners Federation, which, there being few indexes or inventories, was achieved by way of conversations, questions, visits and collections. Their labours were eventually consolidated when the Coalfields History Project was began in 1971. The project was made financially possible by a successful bid to the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), though the real source of the achievement was Glanmor Williams the Head of History at Swansea, to where the growing quantities of materials now went. The South Wales Miner's Library (SWML) was established in 1973 and has continued to catalogue and archive the records of the Federation ever since. The on-line Coalfield Web Materials (CWM) stands as a fine monument to the many who have contributed over the years and today offers a remarkable educational resource (www.agor.org.uk/cwm). Smith and Francis own labours were eventually gathered in The Fed (1980), a major study combining the empirical exactitude of the academic discipline, with the political honesty of the social and economic history they practiced.Dai Smith's life has more usually followed a path of his own making rather than any conventional career. Typically controversy has never been far away and in 1993 Dai Smith joined the BBC in Cardiff, first as Editor of Radio Wales before becoming Head of Broadcasts (English Language). The title typifies the nature of the dispute. From the mid sixties there had been a growing movement to promote Welsh as equal to English as a public language. Activists joined to form Cymdeithas yr Iaith Gymraeg (The Welsh Language Society) and, through 'direct action', succeeded in arousing authorities who responded with ignorance, incredulity and, as protesters filled the courts, physical force. Dai Smith was attacked for seeming to foist the coloniser's language, as the media became a focus in the battle for recognition of Welsh. Beyond radio and television, writing afforded a prime site for conflict. Here too lay controversy with Dai Smith championing Welsh writing in English, while his own work was characteristically contentious. A collection of essays was published in 1984 under the title Wales! Wales? (1984). Contained in it were essays complex in style and deliberately ambivalent in conclusion. Honour and respect for a working class, particularly that of his Rhondda home was unquestionable. What was more problematic was the overt rejection of a stereotyped past of a bible fearing, chapel going, Liberal supporting 'folk', which had become part of a history that the red blooded upstarts of the Welsh Labour History Society challenged. In 2001, Dai Smith left the BBC to become Pro-Vice Chancellor for Research and Regeneration at Glamorgan University. Given his history Dai Smith would appear an ideal person for such a position, however in 2005 he moved again to become the Raymond Williams Research Chair in Cultural History with the Centre for Research into the English Literature and Language of Wales (CREW) at Swansea http://www.swansea.ac.uk/CREW/. The move signalled what was becoming a major venture in his life though its origins dated back to 1989 when Joy Williams had invited him to consider writing the biography of her husband.Dai Smith has spoken of a trunk of papers in little order and with no inventory. Drawing on diaries recording personal reflections and memories, Dai Smith tracked people ranging from long term residents of Pandy, university friends from Cambridge and most remarkably fellow soldiers from the War. The demands though of BBC broadcasting and then from 2001 Glamorgan University inhibited progress and A Warrior's Tale became a stalled project. With the move to Swansea in 2005, writing took on a new tempo and a manuscript once more became realisable. Further impetus came when in 2004 Dai Smith was appointed to advise on a new Library of Wales initiative to re-publish classic texts celebrating Welsh writing in English http://www.libraryofwales.org/. The series included Lewis Jones' Cwmardy and We Live (2006) amongst the first clutch of titles. Paralleling the biography, Dai Smith wrote a Forward to another in the series, Border Country (2006). A Warrior's Tale appeared this year and plans are in place for publication, also by the Library of Wales, of two previously unpublished novels retrieved from the trunk first unearthed nearly twenty years ago. In March 2006 Dai Smith was appointed Chair of the Arts Council of Wales, initially on an interim basis which was confirmed for a further three years in April 2007 Almost inevitably the appointment was made amid controversy with criticism raised of the manner in which it was arrived at. However in the past two years Dai Smith has successfully led the Council through a comprehensive review and committed it to perhaps addressing those whose voice he has for so long sought to sponsor.
Off the Track By Dai Smith
Off the Trackby Dai Smith
Very Good
£8.20
Short Story Anthology By Dai Smith
Short Story Anthologyby Dai Smith
Very Good
£4.50
The Crossing By Dai Smith
The Crossingby Dai Smith
Very Good
£8.80
Dream On By Dai Smith
Dream Onby Dai Smith
Very Good
£6.10
In the Frame By Dai Smith
In the Frameby Dai Smith
Very Good
£8.10
In the Frame By Dai Smith
In the Frameby Dai Smith
Very Good
£3.50
Dream on By Dai Smith
Dream onby Dai Smith
New
£8.79