Books

  1. Timothy Gray

    Timothy Gray approved AndrewTheLott’s request to change the contributors of The English: A Portrait of a People 2 weeks ago.

    • Added a contributor: Jeremy Paxman: (Primary Author)
    ( see Timothy Gray’s edits | report abuse )
  2. AndrewTheLott

    Timothy Gray approved AndrewTheLott’s request to combine 2 books, including The English: A Portrait of a People, 2 weeks ago.

    Visit the Shelfari Librarians group if you have questions about this edit.
    ( see all changes to this book | see AndrewTheLott’s edits | report abuse )
  3. AndrewTheLott

    AndrewTheLott submitted a request to combine 2 books, including The English: A Portrait of a People, 2 weeks ago.

    Timothy Gray approved this request.
    Visit the Shelfari Librarians group if you have questions about this edit.
    ( see all changes to this book | see AndrewTheLott’s edits | report abuse )
  4. AndrewTheLott

    AndrewTheLott edited the contributors of The English: A Portrait of a People 2 weeks ago.

    • Added a contributor: Jeremy Paxman: (Primary Author)
    Timothy Gray approved this request. ( see AndrewTheLott’s edits | report abuse )
  5. Shelfari

    Shelfari edited the description of The English: A Portrait of a People Friday, July 31 2009.

    • Not so long ago, writes Jeremy Paxman, the English were "polite, unexcitable, reserved, and had hot-water bottles instead of a sex-life". Today the end of empire has killed off the Bulldog Breed - "fearless and philistine, safe in taxis and invaluable in shipwrecks" - and transformed the great public schools. Princess Diana was mourned with the effusive emotionalism of an Italian saint. Leader-writers in "The Times" even praise the sexual skills of English lovers ...So what are the defining features of "Englishness"? How can a country of football hooligans have such an astonishingly low murder rate? Does the nation's sense of itself extend to millions of black, Asian and other immigrant Britons? Is it grounded in arrogant, nostalgic fantasy or can it form the basis for building a realistic future within Europe? To answer these crucial questions, Paxman looks for clues in the English language, literature, luke-warm religion and "curiously passionless devotion" to cricket. He explores attitudes to Catholics, the countryside, intellectuals, food and the French. And he brings together insights from novelists, sociologists and gentleman farmers; the editor of "This England" magazine (launched in 1967 with the slogan "as refreshing as a cup of tea"); a banker enthusiastic about the "English vice" of flagellation; and a team at the OED looking for the first occurrence of phrases like "bad hair day" and "the dog's bollocks".

    ( see all changes to this book’s description )
  6. Shelfari

    Shelfari edited the first sentence of The English: A Portrait of a People Friday, July 17 2009.

    • Once upon a time the English knew who they were.
    ( see all changes to this book’s first sentence )
displaying 1-6 edits
Advertisement