In the UK, the far right have basically occupied the high ground in defining what Englishness is. Wrapped in flags, nostalgic for Empire, exceptionalism and clinging to the frail ideal of England as being a morally superior culture. The regular repetition of these major shibboleths has consequently poisoned social and political discourse, to the extent that even a supposedly socialist party believed it had to resort to the same toxic gutter and morally emptied itself of all principle and empathy, in order to curry popularity.
Caroline Lucas, in this perceptive book, looks at what Another England to that of the far right might look like. What dignified role can pride in your, country, people and place have these days? She chose to write this book to put out some ideas of her own on paper, to kick off a discussion. A discussion that left leaning parties are noticeably wary of even broaching, for fear of justifying the very views they wish to oppose. Such is the curious political bind we are in, everyone knows Reform needs to be challenged in this area and their selective use of what is thought to be patriotic, but merely resort to name calling.
What defines a nation is really all about the stories we tell ourselves. Because whatever they are, these manifest in how we relate to and behave in the world, how we treat others, and the environment. And in a country where more and more people are struggling to make ends meet, giving them hope and pride is not insignificant. Lucas begins by utilising our heritage of English literature as an entry point into discovering what that other England might look like. The poetry of John Clare bemoaning the enclosures, the stories of Charles Dickens and Elizabeth Gaskell about the human costs and wrongs of the Industrial Revolution. It's true that as the first modern industrial nation, we also were innovating the social responsibility of capitalists. Pioneering a welfare state and the NHS.
There is also the frequency of protest throughout English history, as an agent for change. How the actions of ordinary people of England have forced social, economic and environmental improvements, stretching from the Peasents Revolt, Kett's Rebellion, Levellers, Diggers, Chartists, Suffragettes all the way to Occupy and Extinction Rebellion. These point to a progressive demand for social, economic and environmental justice running like a positive vein of English blood through them all. This starts to tell you of Another England that isn't regressive or toxically obsessed with resisting the imaginary blandishments of 'wokery'.
She makes some suggestions about a way forward, but this is a work in progress. For this is really about the renewal of our broken democratic contract with the people of this country. That England needs to be better represented as an electoral entity. That practical things like net zero needs to be reached now, not in 2050. We need to stop behaving as if the climate emergency can be put off or delayed. Britain, and it's governments currently have a lack of urgency about this and many other issues, it responds slowly and incrementally, this is somewhat endemic and it's making us all poorer, sick and apathetic.
Don't read this book expecting to find all the answers here, it is simply giving you a few much-needed directional pointers. We all have to discover for ourselves what we believe we want our country to be and then fight for that.
But as James Baldwin so succinctly puts it -
'Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it's faced'.
CARROT REVIEW - 4/8
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