It will be interesting to see exactly which customs the Vatican is going to allow from the past rich five centuries of Anglican worship, life and thought.
It will be interesting to see exactly which customs the Vatican is going to allow from the past rich five centuries of Anglican worship, life and thought.
ColumnsPaul Rogers Li Datong Fred Halliday Mary Kaldor Daniele Archibugi The World
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Patrick WrightPatrick Wright is a cultural critic, historian, and broadcaster, and professor of modern cultural studies at Nottingham Trent University. Among his
books are On
Living in an Old Country: The National Past in Contemporary Britain (Verso, 1985), The
Village that Died for England: The Strange Story of Tyneham (Jonathan Cape, 1995; Faber, revised edition, 2002), Tank: The Progress of a
Monstrous War Machine (Faber, 2000), The River: the Thames in
Our Time (BBC Worldwide, 1999), and (as co-author) Stanley
Spencer (Tate, 2001). His latest book is Iron Curtain: From Stage
to Cold War (Oxford University Press, 2007).
Recent articlesReal England? Reflections on Broadway Market An enduring narrative of England - one with radical as well as conservative variants - sees it as a country besieged by hostile forces, its traditions under threat. A lively London market gives Patrick Wright a fresh perspective on the habit of "conceiving England as a heritage in danger". Iron Curtain: a century restagedAn excavation of the true origin of a familiar political expression opens the door to a different understanding of the "long cold war", finds Patrick Wright. The stone bombIn response to the horrors of imperial air warfare in Ethiopia, Burma, and India in the 1930s, the sculptor Eric Benfield and the socialist-feminist Sylvia Pankhurst turned political passion into art with a unique Anti-Air War Memorial. The cultural archaeologist Patrick Wright visits the London suburb where it is located, and retrieves the fascinating story of a public monument for peace. |
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