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E-raamat: Promised You A Miracle: Why 1980-82 Made Modern Britain

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-Sep-2015
  • Kirjastus: Penguin Books Ltd
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780141972558
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 03-Sep-2015
  • Kirjastus: Penguin Books Ltd
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780141972558

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'Offers so much pleasure and insight' Guardian 'Entertaining, convincing and timely' The Times

A vivid, seminal portrait of the early 1980s: a period that changed Britain forever

The early 1980s in Britain were a time of hope, and of dread: of Cold War tension and imminent conflict, when crowds in the street could mean an ecstatic national celebration or an inner-city riot. Here, Andy Beckett recreates an often misunderstood moment of transition, with all its potential and uncertainty: the first precarious years of Margaret Thatcher's government. By the end of 1982, the country was changing, leaving the kinder, more sluggish postwar Britain decisively behind, and becoming the country we have lived in ever since: assertive, commercially driven, outward-looking, often harsher than its neighbours.

Arvustused

An anthology of an age . . . A book that offers so much pleasure and insight -- Ian Jack * Guardian * Austin Metros and Chariots of Fire, cricket balls and petrol bombs, Sloane Rangers and Boys from the Blackstuff . . . Andy Beckett's lively and even-handed account of two years in the life of modern Britons is bracingly anti-nostalgic. Focusing sharply on key players and events, he teases out the paradoxes of those sharp-elbowed and irony-free times, and leaves the reader with provoking questions about how we got here from there -- Hilary Mantel Promised You a Miracle is intelligent, entertaining, readable, convincing and timely. It is history well told and properly done -- Daniel Finkelstein * The Times * Beckett is a lucid, focussed writer . . . There is a wry, shrewd humanity to his historical interests -- Richard Davenport-Hines * Observer * A breezy and very intelligent anatomy of the years 1980-82 . . . This is not conventional political history - and is all the better for it. Beckett is as interested in the flowering of independent television production companies and the regeneration of London's Docklands as he is in monetarism, the Falklands War and the assault on the trade unions -- Jonathan Derbyshire * Prospect * [ A] gripping mixture of contemporary history and vivid reportage -- John Campbell * Independent * Those who lived through the early eighties - who spent all that time wondering what the hell was going to happen next - will enjoy Beckett's work because it validates what at times seemed like a waking dream, or sometimes a waking nightmare. For those too young, the book is valuable as a reminder that there were other times in recent history when it seemed everything was beginning to slide -- Jamie Kenny * Big Issue * Beckett has a fine eye for detail -- Andrew Neather * Evening Standard * [ Beckett] mixes history, journalism and autobiography. He has a strong sense of place -- Richard Vinen * Literary Review * The appeal of Beckett's book is that he succeeds in showing rather than merely telling us why his chosen period was pivotal in the life of the nation. For those who lived through all the turbulence, as I did, it reawakens memories and helps reconnect you with the person you once were. For those who did not, or who cannot remember, it recounts well how an old nation roused itself from slumber and dared to change the course on which it seemed set -- Jason Cowley * New Statesman *

Muu info

We still live in the outward-looking, market-driven, polarized, colourful and cruel country that the early eighties brought into being. Why did Britain change so dramatically? What was destroyed, and created? This is the untold story of what it felt like and how it made us who we are.
Prologue: Ron's Chair ix
Introduction: `A Small Number of Determined People' xv
PART ONE Yearnings
1 A British Car to Beat the World
3(13)
2 The Year of Flags
16(25)
PART TWO Morbid Symptoms
3 The Liverpool Model
41(18)
4 Wait Until Dusk
59(22)
5 Doom City
81(30)
PART THREE Stirrings
6 Winter Thaw
111(18)
7 `London's Ours!'
129(25)
8 Are You the Cleaners?
154(29)
PART FOUR Revolution in the Head
9 Secret Thatcherites
183(24)
10 Scams
207(22)
11 Our Friends in the South
229(26)
12 We Won
255(36)
PART FIVE A New World
13 Cocaine and Glass
291(26)
14 A Journey
317(29)
15 `Loonies'
346(27)
Epilogue: Whose Miracle? 373(16)
Acknowledgements 389(2)
Bibliography 391(18)
Index 409
Andy Beckett writes for the Guardian. He has also written for the Economist, The New York Times magazine, the London Review of Books and the Independent on Sunday. His previous books are When the Lights Went Out and Pinochet in Piccadilly.