糖心Vlog

George McKay, Roger Numas, R.鈥塁. Richardson, Peter J. Smith and Sharon Wheeler...

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Published on
September 26, 2013
Last updated
June 10, 2015

George McKay, AHRC leadership fellow for the Connected Communities programme, University of Salford, is reading Lee Higgins鈥 Community Music: In聽Theory and In Practice (Oxford University Press, 2012). 鈥淎 challenging effort to understand the ideas of community music, that obstinate, creative, critical movement of informal music education and social engagement. Among many (too many?) case studies, Higgins draws on past practice as a samba drummer. Most interesting is the theoretical discussion, which seeks to move beyond the familiar reading of the music workshop as utopian temporary community.鈥

Hate, by Matthew Collins

Roger Numas, principal lecturer at the University of Brighton, is reading Matthew Collins鈥 Hate: My Life in the British Far Right (Biteback, 2012). 鈥淎n engaging (and funny) account by a former聽member of the British Far Right鈥檚 inner sanctum. Not surprisingly, the enemies are the Jews and their tools 鈥 the Reds and the Blacks. Collins organised sporadic Kristallnachts in South London, but Oldham was his Stalingrad. He gradually became disillusioned with a disunited movement, and the internecine wars, plots and conspiracies fuelled by the naked ambition of an incompetent few took their toll. He is now a turncoat heavily engaged with the Hope not Hate campaign. All鈥檚 well that ends well!鈥

Servants, by Lucy Lethbridge

R.鈥塁. Richardson, professor emeritus of history, University of Winchester, is reading Lucy Lethbridge鈥檚 Servants: A Downstairs View of Twentieth-century Britain (Bloomsbury, 2013). 鈥淩eadable and wide-ranging, it makes use of some little-known sources and charts the impact of total war and other less dramatic but still important developments 鈥 chauffeurs and labour-saving appliances, for instance 鈥 alongside old standards and practices. But it is too anecdotal, lacks a sufficiently tight structure, has too many secondhand quotations, indiscriminately blends fact and fiction, and contains glaring elementary errors.鈥

The Origin of Feces, by David Waltner-Toews

Peter J. Smith, reader in Renaissance literature at Nottingham Trent University, is reading David Waltner-Toews鈥 The Origin of Feces: What Excrement Tells Us About Evolution, Ecology, and a Sustainable Society (ECW Press, 2013). 鈥淲hat starts out as a pensive meditation on the humble dung beetle becomes an impassioned plea for the formulation of eco-friendly policies on waste and water management. This lighthearted book addresses a serious agenda without moral earnestness or apocalyptic despair. Its analysis is thoughtful, engaging and profoundly important.鈥

Red or Dead, by David Peace

Sharon Wheeler, senior lecturer in journalism, University of Portsmouth, is reading David Peace鈥檚 Red or Dead (Faber, 2013). 鈥淚 can take or leave Peace鈥檚 grim crime fiction, but his football novels are in another ballpark. The Damned United was a聽relentless monologue locked in Brian Clough鈥檚 head, and Red or Dead is cut from the same cloth. This time it鈥檚 Liverpool鈥檚 legendary Bill Shankly. You鈥檒l need to run around the training ground to decompress from the intensity and repetitive writing style.鈥

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