Book review: Acts of Union and Disunion, by Linda Colley
With Scotland's referendum on independence looming, this is a timely study of a country whose unwieldy title - emblazoned on my passport - betrays its disunity.
by Linda Colley
Profile Books
3 stars
With Scotland's referendum on independence looming, this is a timely study of a country whose unwieldy title - emblazoned on my passport - betrays its disunity.
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is neither united (the North-South divide and the class system being two of its many centrifugal forces), nor a kingdom, at least at present. And, arguably, as Russia's Vladimir Putin told British reporters last year in Moscow, it's not "great" either.
It's said the "Great" qualifier is to differentiate Britain from France's Brittany, a rationale that's hard to buy for some. Nevertheless, for centuries the country has punched above its weight on the global stage.
Professor Linda Colley has penned a lively tract that consists of 15 thought-provoking essays examining the ties and narratives that bind the UK and also its many glaring fissures.
With well-chosen examples, notably Shakespeare's and a speech by Margaret Thatcher made in 1979, Colley deciphers this perplexing land, from its earliest beginnings through its uncertain - and possibly fractured - future.