Britishness since 1870What does it mean to be British? It is now recognized that being British is not innate, static or permanent, but that national identities within Britain are constantly constructed and reconstructed. Britishness since 1870 examines this definition and redefinition of the British national identity since the 1870s. Paul Ward argues that British national identity is a resilient force, and looks at how Britishness has adapted to changing circumstances. Taking a thematic approach, Britishness since 1870 examines the forces that have contributed to a sense of Britishness, and considers how Britishness has been mediated by other identities such as class, gender, region, ethnicity and the sense of belonging to England, Scotland, Wales and Ireland. |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 72
... nationalism grow stronger in Wales and Scotland, and the re-emergence of the impact of Irish nationalism in Britain (it had never gone away in Northern Ireland). This was the moment when the end of Britain began to be widely predicted ...
... nationalist population there, the fundamental damage to their tolerance towards Britain was inflicted between 1916 and 1921. Virtually nothing that the Unionist state did between 1921 and 1972 was intended to repair that damage, and the ...
... nationalism' as 'the ideological habits which enable the established nations of the West to be reproduced . . . Daily, the nation is indicated or "flagged" in the lives of its citizenry.'9 We might want to invoke the term banal ...
... British imperialism. '1' In Ireland, radical nationalists defined themselves by their opposition to monarchy in the adoption of the description republican, and celebrated their opposition to imperialism so that in Monarchy and Empire 23.
... nationalist opposition to the visit. James Loughlin suggests that the generous Land Act of 1903 extending mortgages available to Irish tenant farmers to buy their land played some part in this, but also that Edward had had the flags on ...
Contents
14 | |
18 | |
22 | |
28 | |
31 | |
37 | |
38 | |
39 | |
Countervailing currents | 96 |
The First World War | 98 |
Between the wars | 100 |
British Fascism and Communism | 101 |
Patriotism and politics in the peoples war | 105 |
The politics of European identity | 108 |
A new way of being British ethnicity and Britishness | 113 |
Continuities and varieties before 1945 | 116 |
Women in Ireland Scotland and Wales | 42 |
The impact of the Great War | 44 |
Gender and Britishness in the Second World War | 47 |
Gender race and home in postwar Britain | 50 |
Rural urban and regional Britishness | 54 |
Finding the core of the nation | 55 |
Regional identities | 66 |
Spare time | 73 |
Sport nation and Empire | 74 |
Sport and nation in Scotland Wales and Ireland | 76 |
Regional and local identities in British sport | 80 |
Race sport and identity | 82 |
Discordant voices | 84 |
Going on holiday | 85 |
Resisting the Americanisation of culture | 89 |
Politicians parties and national identity | 93 |
The Second World War and the national community | 123 |
Numbers and the other in affluent Britain | 125 |
the politics of exclusion | 127 |
Black and Asian identities in the UK | 135 |
Outer Britain | 141 |
Holding together or pulling apart? | 142 |
Wales | 143 |
Scotland | 149 |
Ireland and Northern Ireland | 157 |
The end of Britain? | 168 |
Conclusion | 170 |
Notes | 174 |
Bibliography | 211 |
Index | 229 |