ABSTRACT

In his life, Raymond Williams played many parts: child of the Black Mountains, inspirational adult lecturer, Cambridge professor, folk hero and guru of the left. After his death, he has remained a symbolic figure and his classic works, Culture and Society, The Long Revolution, The Country and the City continue to inspire new generations all over the world.
In this first major biography, Fred Inglis has spoken to those who knew this complex and charismatic man at every stage of his life, from his boyhood in the Welsh border country to his brief years of retirement. Through their voices and his own passionate stories and at times combative engagement with his subject, he tells of a story of a life not just for its time but for our own. After Thatcher and Reagan and the Cold War, Williams still has much to teach us about the nature of a good and just society and about the constant struggle to attain it.

chapter 1|14 pages

Prologue

In Memoriam

chapter 2|25 pages

Under the Mountain

Railway House

chapter 3|25 pages

The Good Town

Abergavenny and the scholarship boy

chapter 4|15 pages

His Cambridge

Undergraduate Communist

chapter 5|20 pages

Guards Officer

chapter 7|25 pages

Outside the Walls

chapter 8|40 pages

Mr Raymond Williams and Dr F.R.Leavis

chapter 9|21 pages

Leader of the Left-In-Exile

chapter 10|21 pages

Watching Television

chapter 11|25 pages

Theory and Experience

chapter 12|29 pages

End of an Epoch

chapter 13|11 pages

For Continuity