
How Britain Ends
English Nationalism and the Rebirth of Four Nations
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Narrated by:
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Robin Laing
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By:
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Gavin Esler
About this listen
A thoughtful, articulate and important book about the rise of English nationalism and the impending breakup of the United Kingdom from one of the finest BBC journalists of the last 20 years.
How Britain Ends is a book about history, but also about the strange, complicated identity of Britishness. In the past, it was possible to live with delightful confusion: one could be English, or British, Scottish or Irish and a citizen/subject of the United Kingdom (or Great Britain). For years that state has been what Gavin Esler calls a 'secret federation', but without the explicit federal arrangements that allow Germany or the USA to survive.
Now the archaic state, which doesn't have a written constitution, is coming under terrible strain. The English revolt against Europe is also a revolt against the awkward squads of the Scottish and Irish, and most English conservatives would be happy to get rid of Northern Ireland and Scotland as the price of getting Brexit done. If no productive trade deal with the EU can be agreed, the pressures to declare Scottish independence and to push for a border poll that would unite Ireland will be irresistible.
Can England and Wales find a way of dealing with the state's new place in the world? What constitutional, federal arrangements might prevent the disintegration of the British state, which has survived in its present form for 400 years?
©2021 Gavin Esler (P)2021 Head of Zeus(For the record I write this from my home in Edinburgh. I was born British in the great city of Bristol but have been in Scotland nearly 30 years. I never really considered myself English but strangely friends and family South of the border have become English, or more explicitly English, in my absence. I now consider myself Scottish first then a disenfranchised European. Britishness is long gone. )
recommended - with one caveat
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An interesting read....
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Britain could very well ‘end’ by its own doing. A good read.
Good read
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Excellent history, beautiful reading, compelling should be heard by all.
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well argued and we'll read.
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Illuminating
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Superb analysis
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Irritating accents
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The Challenge of English Nationalism
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Should the U.K. continue?
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