The Latest(ish)

Clio, that most elusive of Muses, can be glimpsed, but never caught. The interpretation of history is forever in flux, as much reflection of the present as window on the past. There are few better examples of this than England’s turbulent 17th century. Depending on whom you asked, and when, its conflicts were painful, but ultimately progressive; painful, but ultimately reactionary; or painful, but ultimately pointless. The natural response to the publication of yet another interpretation of one of the pivotal events of that century, the “Glorious Revolution” of 1688, is to ask, what now? According to Michael Barone, the [...]

1688 and All That

July 30, 2007

"Our First Revolution:The Remarkable British Upheaval That Inspired America’s Founding Fathers", by Michael Barone; published originally in National Review

Don’t be put off by agitprop, achingly self-conscious blue-collar grit, and accents that may mystify some on this side of the Atlantic: “This Is England,” the latest offering from the up-and-coming British director Shane Meadows, is a sometimes exhilarating, sometimes wrenching and, at its best, profoundly moving coming-of-age tale that also manages to find room to ponder questions of friendship, fatherhood, group loyalty, masculinity, and national identity. That’s not bad for 98 minutes. What’s more, this is a film with a brilliantly evocative sense of time and place. “This Is England” offers the England of 1983, an era of great [...]

Fathers, Sons, And Bogeymen

July 25, 2007

This Is England; published originally in The New York Sun

If there’s one voice that can be heard above the hubbub described in Emily Cockayne‘s aptly titled new book, it is the voice, splenetic, dyspeptic, and thoroughly fed up, of the grumbler in high dudgeon. For all their traditional stoicism, the English have always known how to complain, and to do so with an acerbity and wit that leaves more famously querulous nations (yes, Jacques, yes, Pierre, I’m talking about you) looking like little more than whiny schoolchildren. When it comes to the topic of “Hubbub” (Yale University Press, 335 pages, $35), the squalor, grubbiness, and general unpleasantness of everyday [...]

Stench & the City

July 11, 2007

"Hubbub" by Emily Cockayne; published originally in The New York Sun