Out of Place: Englishness, Empire, and the Locations of IdentityPrinceton University Press, 25.01.1999 - 280 Seiten In a 1968 speech on British immigration policy, Enoch Powell insisted that although a black man may be a British citizen, he can never be an Englishman. This book explains why such a claim was possible to advance and impossible to defend. Ian Baucom reveals how "Englishness" emerged against the institutions and experiences of the British Empire, rendering English culture subject to local determinations and global negotiations. In his view, the Empire was less a place where England exerted control than where it lost command of its own identity. |
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... forget about Britain's lost empire. It is a paradox of a fairly minor sort that these two accounts of the Thatcher decade are not mutually exclusive. Remembrance, especially nostalgic remembrance, is regularly intimate with forgetting ...
... forgetting all the while that we are breathing. Curiously then, it is precisely at the moment that we become aware of our environments of memory, precisely at the moment that we pause to contemplate the breath of the past expanding the ...
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Out of Place: Englishness, Empire, and the Locations of Identity Ian Baucom Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1999 |
Out of Place: Englishness, Empire, and the Locations of Identity Ian Baucom Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1999 |
Out of Place: Englishness, Empire, and the Locations of Identity Ian Baucom Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1999 |