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Forever England: North and South

di Beryl Bainbridge

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History ignores what literature does not: ordinary people, families, jobs, humble expectations, the etiquette of simply being alive. So history may divide England into two nations, the industrial North and the agricultural South, but it fails to examine the social and human roots of that notion -- unlike Beryl Bainbridge in this illuminating chronicle of six representative English families, three in the North and three in the South, which defines not only the geographical borders that divide them but also examines the circumstances of birth, class, economic opportunity, and social custom that confine them.However common their experience -- coming of age during the depression that followed World War I and then experiencing the hardships of a second world war to become ultimately the beneficiaries of the Welfare State and of technological advances beyond their dreams -- the principals in these tales, based on a popular BBC television series, are far more distinctively the products of a place than of a time.… (altro)
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In a book that accompanied a television series, Bainbridge outlines the lives of six families living in England. She explains that to those living in the "North" of England, "South" means "London." There are, she acknowledges, resorts in the South as well, but she thinks of those as places tourists go. The families outlined lived in Liverpool, Hastings, Barnsley, Bentley, Northumberland, and Birmingham. My favorite sketch was probably the one that followed the Johnson family of Northumberland. They were a farm family, but primarily the older generations of the family were shepherds. Some of the younger generations had left farming, but several of the girls were married to farmers. They had other interests as well. The sketches reminded me of the some of the human interest stories one might see Tom Brokaw sharing in his "The Greatest Generation" reports without the strong tie to the military. The Birmingham story briefly explored racial attitudes as it told the story of a black family living there. Bainbridge is a good writer, and there seemed to be a thread running through the stories to tie them somewhat together, as one might expect from a television series. That thread to an extent was Bainbridge herself as she offered her own observations and "takeaways" from each vignette. ( )
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History ignores what literature does not: ordinary people, families, jobs, humble expectations, the etiquette of simply being alive. So history may divide England into two nations, the industrial North and the agricultural South, but it fails to examine the social and human roots of that notion -- unlike Beryl Bainbridge in this illuminating chronicle of six representative English families, three in the North and three in the South, which defines not only the geographical borders that divide them but also examines the circumstances of birth, class, economic opportunity, and social custom that confine them.However common their experience -- coming of age during the depression that followed World War I and then experiencing the hardships of a second world war to become ultimately the beneficiaries of the Welfare State and of technological advances beyond their dreams -- the principals in these tales, based on a popular BBC television series, are far more distinctively the products of a place than of a time.

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