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Distributed for University of Wales Press

Wittgenstein in Swansea

Philosophy and Legacy

A multidisciplinary and accessible approach to a key period of Wittgenstein’s work.

This edited volume covers aspects of Ludwig Wittgenstein’s time in Swansea from 1942 to 47. It covers his interaction with Rush Rhees, his stimulus for the Swansea School, and his broader influence on students, academics, and a plethora of writers from a range of disciplines and interests. It looks at his philosophy and legacy through various lenses and perspectives. These include explanations and assessments of Wittgenstein’s time and work at Swansea from Ray Monk, Jonathan Smith, and Alfred Schmidt; historical and cultural scene setting from Jeff Towns; analyses of the Swansea School from Mario von der Ruhr, and Huw Williams; literary comparisons from Daniel Williams; ideological evaluations from Rhianwen Daniel; and a range of intimate reflections and commentaries from James Kelman, Jamie Bill, and M. Wynn Thomas. Editor Alan Sandry also offers some psychogeographical observations and considers Wittgenstein’s present-day significance within Swansea. 

256 pages | 6 halftones | 5.43 x 8.5

Biography and Letters

Philosophy: General Philosophy


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Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Preface
Chapter 1 - Wittgenstein : The Swansea Years, 1942-1947 by Ray Monk
Chapter 2 - The Cultural Milieu of Swansea in the 1930s and 1940s by Jeff Towns
Chapter 3 - The Place of Swansea on the Road to Philosophical Investigations by Jonathan Smith
Chapter 4 - ‘It’s good to be away from Cambridge & to be here, & among friendly people.’ – Wittgenstein’s letters to Ben Richards and his philosophical work in Swansea by Alfred Schmidt
Chapter 5 – The ‘Swansea School’ by Mario von der Ruhr
Chapter 6 - JR Jones and Wittgenstein: Resisting the Demise of the Welsh-language ‘Neighbourhood’ by Huw Williams
Chapter 7 - Wittgenstein, Communitarianism, and Welsh Cultural-Linguistic Identity by Rhianwen Daniel
Chapter 8 - ‘Change and decay in all around I see’: The Wittgenstein School of English at Swansea by M. Wynn Thomas
Chapter 9 - Strange Country: The Cosmopolitan Particularism of Ludwig Wittgenstein and Ralph Ellison by Daniel G. Williams
Chapter 10 - The Psychogeography of Swansea as a Stimulus for Wittgenstein’s Cerebration by Alan Sandry
Chapter 11 – Wittgenstein, Rhees and Philosophy: James Kelman in conversation
Chapter 12 - Family Recollections of Wittgenstein in Swansea by Jamie Bill
Wittgenstein’s Swansea Legacy and Contemporary Relevance: Afterword by Alan Sandry
Bibliography

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