The Brexit Effect, 2016-2026 edited by Anthony Seldon review, life without EU
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Essays by the great and the good address the legacy of Brexit, but ignore the nationalist elephant in the room This massive collection of essays by 43 different authors, including seven lords, four baronesses, one dame and three knights of…
Essays by the great and the good address the legacy of Brexit, but ignore the nationalist elephant in the room
This massive collection of essays by 43 different authors, including seven lords, four baronesses, one dame and three knights of the realm, may be the nearest we will ever get to a semi-official reflection on the causes and consequences of Brexit. Its editor, Sir Anthony Seldon, is honorary historian at 10 Downing Street and has written definitive works on successive 21st-century British administrations.
Yet the phrase “English nationalism” appears precisely once in its 600 pages, in a glancing reference to the line taken by the Daily Mail during the referendum campaign of 2016. Strikingly, while there is a fine essay by Aileen McHarg called On Scotland, there is none called On England. There is no attempt to provide even a broad overview of the tensions, contradictions and anxieties within the part of the UK where Brexit was won: non-metropolitan England. For much of the political and intellectual establishment, it seems, Englishness is still the condition that dare not speak its name.
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