Editors: Arthur Aughey and Christine Berberich
Edition: First
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Pages: 256
Price: 拢60.00 and 拢14.99
ISBN: 9780719079603 and 9610
A recent essay on the poetry of U.A. Fanthorpe led me to explore the growing critical literature on Englishness, and These Englands is a welcome addition to this field. This genuinely cross-disciplinary collection contains essays by scholars of politics, literature, sociology and social psychology. If politics essays are numerically dominant, this should not deter readers from other disciplines. The book is prefaced by Krishan Kumar, whose book The Making of English National Identity (2003) has been influential. Arthur Aughey and Christine Berberich then provide a useful introduction, promoting 鈥淓nglishness as conversation鈥 and offering a valuable overview of significant political, literary and cultural writings on England and the English.
Part One, 鈥淓nglishness in discourse and opinion鈥, opens with Susan Condor鈥檚 exploration of English national self-identification via the methodology of research interviews, with interviewee confusion about self-defining as English or British much in evidence. John Curtice discusses English identity in the light of the devolved Scottish and Welsh parliaments. Paul Thomas considers the meaning of Englishness for non-white people and asks whether it is possible to pursue more inclusive non-racial understandings of Englishness. Identifying as 鈥淏ritish鈥 has, for many from ethnic minorities, been the national affiliation of choice, raising the question of the extent to which 鈥渂eing English鈥 is equated with 鈥渂eing white鈥. Christopher Bryant engages with what he calls 鈥渦topian realism鈥 to consider contemporary England and its future via theories of cosmopolitanism.
Part Two focuses on 鈥淓nglishness in politics and institutions鈥. Stephen Ingle charts the link between the Conservatives and Englishness from Edmund Burke to David Cameron, while Matthew Beech considers Englishness and the Left. Simon Lee鈥檚 argument is that Gordon Brown鈥檚 tenure as chancellor and prime minister concentrated on the modernisation of Britain to the negation of England as a political community. Philip Norton discusses the Englishness of the Westminster parliament and Colin Copus considers Englishness and local government.
Whatever Englishness is or will become, it is linked to how Englishness has been envisaged in the past, and Part Three, 鈥淓nglishness in history and imagination鈥, makes this clear. Julia Stapleton cites Kumar鈥檚 suggestion that England鈥檚 key nationalist 鈥渕oment鈥 took place c.1880-1920, consolidated imaginatively through various cultural constructions, and she then discusses the writings of Arthur Mee and G.K. Chesterton. Gary Day鈥檚 focus is on three recent novels (Julian Barnes鈥 England, England, Monica Ali鈥檚 Brick Lane and Philip Hensher鈥檚 The Northern Clemency), and how they register the increasing effect of free-market values on what Englishness means. There is a 鈥渕elancholic Englishness鈥, in Paul Thomas鈥 phrase, that pervades many 20th-century literary representations of England, and Patrick Parrinder ranges from Donald Davie to Philip Larkin to Grace Nichols to consider an elegiac post-1945 England in decline.
糖心Vlog
This is an interesting and up-to-date volume, and the extensive bibliography also deserves a mention.
Who is it for? Students and scholars of literature, politics, history and sociology who are interested in questions of nationhood and Englishness.
糖心Vlog
Presentation: Clearly organised into coherent parts.
Would you recommend it? Yes. It is a valuable addition to political and cultural discussions of Englishness.
Highly recommended
Contemporary Poetry
Author: Nerys Williams
Edition: First
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Pages: 288
Price: 拢65.00 and 拢18.99
ISBN: 9780748638840 and 8857
The Cambridge Companion to Twentieth-Century British and Irish Women鈥檚 Poetry
Editor: Jane Dowson
Edition: First
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Pages: 240
Price: 拢50.00 and 拢17.99
ISBN: 9780521197854 and 120210
The Cambridge Companion to Creative Writing
Editors: David Morley and Philip Neilsen
Edition: First
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Pages: 248
Price: 拢50.00 and 拢17.99
ISBN: 9780521768498 and 145367
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