Listopia > Veronica's votes on the list Billy Bragg's Top 10 Books On Englishness (11 Books)
| 1 |
|
The Lion and the Unicorn: Socialism and the English Genius
by
"Written during the Blitz, with Nazi invasion seemingly imminent, Orwell wonders aloud if there is anything in this country worth defending, even dying for. The picture he paints of "a family in which the wrong people are in charge" still resonates, as do his attacks on an English intelligentsia "ashamed of their own country". The most important insight he offers is that Englishness is constantly changing: "it stretches into the future and the past, there is something in it that persists, as in a living creature". The greatest book written on the subject from a left-wing perspective."
Veronica
added it to to-read
See Review |
|
| 2 |
|
England's Dreaming: Anarchy, Sex Pistols, Punk Rock, and Beyond
by
"Savage was there at the beginning of punk, hanging out with the Pistols and falling for Malcolm McLaren's Situationist shtick. Despite that, his book - the first to attempt to put punk into its proper context - gets beyond the safety pins and snakebite to shed some light how the mediocrity of mid-70s England produced punk rock."
Veronica
added it to to-read
See Review |
|
| 3 |
|
The England's Dreaming Tapes: The Essential Companion to England's Dreaming, the Seminal History of Punk
by
"I couldn't find this book...
Veronica
added it to to-read
England The Light by Stuart Clarke Stuart Clarke is a photographer who, in his own words, sets out "to show a landscape that its quite beautiful without the need for football, industry and people - but is better for their existence". This engaging collection of photographs was mostly taken during Euro 2004 in Portugal and constitutes a dazzling celebration of fandom, accompanied by text in English, German, Portuguese and Swedish." See Review |
|
| 4 |
|
The World Turned Upside Down: Radical Ideas During the English Revolution
by
"Hill's masterpiece captures the turmoil of the one true revolutionary episode in English history, when the principle of government by consent led to the execution of the king. A great period of radical thinking was unleashed, much of it coming from below. Diggers, Ranters, Levellers and others seized the moment to agitate for full democratic accountability. All their arguments are here, alongside those of the grandees who eventually snuffed out the English revolution."
Veronica
added it to to-read
See Review |
|
| 5 |
|
The village that died for England: the strange story of Tyneham
by
"Ostensibly the story of Tyneham, a Dorset village that was evacuated in 1943 to make way for the D-Day preparations and whose residents were never allowed to return, despite Winston Churchill's promise. For Wright however, detail is everything and he clambers over the locked gates and barbed wire fences to discover a "deep England" of eccentric squires, quasi-fascistic communes and neolithic pathways."
Veronica
added it to to-read
See Review |
|
| 6 |
|
England, Half English: A Polyphoto of the Fifties
by
"MacInnes was an Australian who brought an outsider's view to post-war London. He sat in the bars and cafes of Soho, writing articles on the emerging teen culture and the impact of West Indian immigration on the staid English character. This collection of articles, written originally for magazines such as the New Left Review, offers insights into both the roots of swinging London and of our multicultural society."
Veronica
added it to to-read
See Review |
|
| 7 |
|
England in Particular: A Celebration of the Commonplace, the Local, the Vernacular and the Distinctive
by
"A marvellous compendium of the peculiar. Want to know how to participate in the Haxley Hood game or master the ancient art of fen skating? This is the book for you. Every oddity of the English landscape is here, from cabbies' shelters to deserted villages, countryside customs to city superstitions."
Veronica
added it to to-read
See Review |
|
| 8 |
|
The Making of the English Working Class
by
"The founding text of English social history. Thompson shows how the ordinary people of England were not content to wait for political reforms to be handed down to them from above, but were actively fighting for their rights throughout the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
Veronica
added it to to-read
" See Review |
|
| 9 |
|
A Song for Every Season: One Hundred Years in the Life of a Sussex Farming Family
by
"The Copper family tended sheep on the Sussex downland for generations, and built up a vast collection of folk songs which they sung in the fields while working and in the tap room while relaxing with a beer. Discovered by the BBC in the early 1950s, their material formed an important part of the folk revival. Bob Copper's memoir of his family's life on the Downs at Peacehaven is accompanied by songs from the family collection."
Veronica
added it to to-read
See Review |
|
| 10 |
|
The Strange Death of Tory England
by
"It cheers me up just to write that title, never mind read the book."
Veronica
added it to to-read
See Review |
|
| 11 |
|
The Progressive Patriot
by See Review |
|
