No Gods and Precious Few Heroes: Scotland 1900-2015
A colourful and stimulating history of modern Scotland
This introductory history takes Scotland through two world wars and subsequent social exhaustion, through the re-energising adjustments loosely referred to as ‘the sixties’ to a final endgame of Union versus Independence. The novel structure of Harvie’s history mirrors that of a grand engineering project, or a structure as complex as the Forth Railway Bridge: ‘three periods of change rendered as towers, and two great cantilevered arches of life-in-common, over which day-to-day life proceeds’.
Key Features:

A final narrative of ‘Union versus Independence’Thematically rebuilt chapters: Economy/Society/Politics/CultureThe ‘60s’ reinterpretedFrom the APF (JW to ammend)
‘When No Gods and Precious Few Heroes first appeared in 1981 Paul Addison, in the English Historical Review, called Christopher Harvie’s book ‘a masterly synthesis of the most important political, economic social and cultural developments in Scotland’s recent past, written too with great wit and style.’ Updated in 1987, after two further editions in 1996 and 2000 comes this near- total refashioning. ‘Starting and finishing in melodrama’, its much-travelled author, after living with politics and media in Europe, assesses the new parliamentary state against thirty-five turbulent, vertiginous years. Narrative and episodes shift from squaddies in Iraq camps to working mothers reclaiming civic life from failing religion and big crime. Traceable all-too -often to an untended past, the demand for ‘love patience and power to absolve those tormented’ might at last – through most unusual politics – be getting to it

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No Gods and Precious Few Heroes: Scotland 1900-2015
A colourful and stimulating history of modern Scotland
This introductory history takes Scotland through two world wars and subsequent social exhaustion, through the re-energising adjustments loosely referred to as ‘the sixties’ to a final endgame of Union versus Independence. The novel structure of Harvie’s history mirrors that of a grand engineering project, or a structure as complex as the Forth Railway Bridge: ‘three periods of change rendered as towers, and two great cantilevered arches of life-in-common, over which day-to-day life proceeds’.
Key Features:

A final narrative of ‘Union versus Independence’Thematically rebuilt chapters: Economy/Society/Politics/CultureThe ‘60s’ reinterpretedFrom the APF (JW to ammend)
‘When No Gods and Precious Few Heroes first appeared in 1981 Paul Addison, in the English Historical Review, called Christopher Harvie’s book ‘a masterly synthesis of the most important political, economic social and cultural developments in Scotland’s recent past, written too with great wit and style.’ Updated in 1987, after two further editions in 1996 and 2000 comes this near- total refashioning. ‘Starting and finishing in melodrama’, its much-travelled author, after living with politics and media in Europe, assesses the new parliamentary state against thirty-five turbulent, vertiginous years. Narrative and episodes shift from squaddies in Iraq camps to working mothers reclaiming civic life from failing religion and big crime. Traceable all-too -often to an untended past, the demand for ‘love patience and power to absolve those tormented’ might at last – through most unusual politics – be getting to it

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No Gods and Precious Few Heroes: Scotland 1900-2015

No Gods and Precious Few Heroes: Scotland 1900-2015

by Christopher Harvie
No Gods and Precious Few Heroes: Scotland 1900-2015

No Gods and Precious Few Heroes: Scotland 1900-2015

by Christopher Harvie

Paperback(4th ed.)

$23.95 
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Overview

A colourful and stimulating history of modern Scotland
This introductory history takes Scotland through two world wars and subsequent social exhaustion, through the re-energising adjustments loosely referred to as ‘the sixties’ to a final endgame of Union versus Independence. The novel structure of Harvie’s history mirrors that of a grand engineering project, or a structure as complex as the Forth Railway Bridge: ‘three periods of change rendered as towers, and two great cantilevered arches of life-in-common, over which day-to-day life proceeds’.
Key Features:

A final narrative of ‘Union versus Independence’Thematically rebuilt chapters: Economy/Society/Politics/CultureThe ‘60s’ reinterpretedFrom the APF (JW to ammend)
‘When No Gods and Precious Few Heroes first appeared in 1981 Paul Addison, in the English Historical Review, called Christopher Harvie’s book ‘a masterly synthesis of the most important political, economic social and cultural developments in Scotland’s recent past, written too with great wit and style.’ Updated in 1987, after two further editions in 1996 and 2000 comes this near- total refashioning. ‘Starting and finishing in melodrama’, its much-travelled author, after living with politics and media in Europe, assesses the new parliamentary state against thirty-five turbulent, vertiginous years. Narrative and episodes shift from squaddies in Iraq camps to working mothers reclaiming civic life from failing religion and big crime. Traceable all-too -often to an untended past, the demand for ‘love patience and power to absolve those tormented’ might at last – through most unusual politics – be getting to it


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780748682560
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 03/24/2016
Series: New History of Scotland
Edition description: 4th ed.
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.50(h) x 0.70(d)
Lexile: 1340L (what's this?)

About the Author

Christopher Harvie, Professor of British and Irish Studies at the University of Tübingen, has written extensively on UK and Scottish history. A founder-historian at the Open University, 1969‒80, he is the author of over 16 books, including The Lights of Liberalism (1976), Scotland and Nationalism (1977), The Rise of Regional Europe (1994), Nineteenth-Century Britain (2000), and Scotland: A Short History (2014). He was a Member of the Scottish Parliament, 2007‒11. He spent 2007-11 in Scottish Parliament as MSP (SNP Regional List) for Fife, and was Political Liaison Officer to First Minister Alex Salmond. He has made several TV and Radio documentaries for the BBC and European media concerns, and lectured in Europe, East and West, North America and the Near East.

Table of Contents

Foreword; Acknowledgements; 1. Finest Hour and After, 1911-1922; 2. A Troubled Economy, 1922-1964; 3. The Pillars of Society, 1922-1964; 4. Politics and Government, 1922-1964; 5. Mass Media: High Culture, 1922-1964; 6. Economics and the Service Society, 1964-1999; 7. Politics and the Better Nation, 1964-1999; 8. ‘Point of Departure?’, 1999-2015; Further Reading; Chronological Table, 1906-2015; Index.
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