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Lawrence Black, Mary Evans, Paul Greatrix, Vanessa Pupavac and R. C. Richardson...

A weekly look over the shoulders of our scholar-reviewers

Published on
May 22, 2014
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Lawrence Black, professor of modern British history, University of York, is reading Steven Fielding鈥檚 A State of Play: British Politics on Screen, Stage and Page, from Anthony Trollope to The Thick of It (Bloomsbury, 2014). 鈥淚n a witty, empirically dense and provocative book, Fielding argues that culture has always informed, for good and ill, popular perceptions of politics. It entwines fiction, films, plays and politics 鈥 where else can you find obscure turn-of-the-century cinema gems and forgotten ITV dramas alongside Anthony Trollope and Malcolm Tucker? Could this be a book that nudges political history out of its methodological impasse?鈥

Review: Four Thousand Lives, by Clare Ungerson

Mary Evans, centennial professor in the Gender Institute, London School of Economics, is reading Clare Ungerson鈥檚 Four Thousand Lives: The Rescue of German Jewish Men to Britain, 1939 (The History Press, 2014). 鈥淎 beautifully written and compelling account of the successful efforts made by the British Jewish community (and others) to create a haven in Sandwich for Jewish men. The daily lives of the men, their part in the generally welcoming local area and their subsequent futures are all vividly described, as is the tortuous, but always determined, process of their rescue.鈥

Review: Expo 58, by Jonathan Coe

Paul Greatrix, registrar, University of Nottingham, is reading Jonathan Coe鈥檚 Expo 58 (Viking, 2013). 鈥淚t鈥檚 all a bit Our Man in Havana in Brussels, but no worse for that. Coe has produced another excellent novel about a reserved civil servant who comes alive in the optimistic Expo world. His job is to look after the main British exhibit, a pub, but he gets caught up in Cold War shenanigans that cause him to question where his loyalties lie.鈥

Review: Something Wicked This Way Comes, by Ray Bradbury

Vanessa Pupavac, senior lecturer in international relations, University of Nottingham, is reading Ray Bradbury鈥檚 Something Wicked This Way Comes (Gollancz, 2008). 鈥淎 wonderful American gothic allegory that shatters Macbeth鈥檚 despairing vision of our days as lighting fools the way to dusty death as we follow Jim and Will, 14-year-old friends racing off to the temptations of the carnival and the night. 鈥楾oo late,鈥 says Will鈥檚 father. 鈥業 found you can鈥檛 wait to become perfect, you got to go out and fall down and get up with everybody else.鈥欌

Review: 12 Years a Slave, by Solomon Northup

R. C. Richardson, emeritus professor of history, University of Winchester, is reading Solomon Northup鈥檚 Twelve Years a Slave (Hesperus Press, 2013). 鈥淭he success of the recent film version of this book, first published in 1853, has spawned a number of reprints. This 鈥榓utobiography鈥 is probably best understood as a sequel to Harriet Beecher Stowe鈥檚 evangelising novel Uncle Tom鈥檚 Cabin, published only one year earlier. The precise role of the original (white) anti-slavery editor in 鈥榩resenting鈥 Northup鈥檚 narrative of kidnapping and enslavement is now impossible to determine but was surely considerable.鈥

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