Introduction: The Britishness Question: Andrew Gamble and Tony Wright
1. Bursting with Skeletons : Britishness after Empire: David Marquand
2. Does Britishness Still Matter in the Twenty–First Century – and How Much and How Well Do the Politicians Care?: Linda Colley
3. Being British: Bhikhu Parekh
4. Britishness: a Role for the State?: Varun Uberoi and Iain McLean
5. England and Britain, Europe and the Anglosphere: David Willetts
6. What Britishness means to the British: Peter Kellner
7. The BBC and Metabolising Britishness. Critical Patriotism: Jean Seaton
8. Don t Mess with the Missionary Man: Brown, Moral Compasses and the Road to Britishness: Gerry Hassan
9. Britishness and the Future of the Union: Robert Hazell
10. Devolution, Britishness and the Future of the Union: Charlie Jeffery
11. Englishness in Contemporary British Politics: Richard English, Richard Hayton and Michael Kenny
12. The Wager of Devolution and the Challenge to Britishness: Arthur Aughey
13. Do We Really Need Britannia?: Bernard Crick
14. Churchill s Dover Speech (1946): Peter Hennessy
Index
Andrew Gamble is Professor of Politics at the University of Sheffield. He is joint editor of
The Political Quarterly and his books include
Between Europe and America: The Future of British Politics (2003) and
Politics and Fate (2000).
Tony Wright is MP for Cannock Chase and Chairman of the Public Administration Committee in the House of Commons. He is joint editor of The Political Quarterly and his books include The British Political Process (1999) and Socialisms: Old and New (1996).
Andrew Gamble and Tony Wright have also co–edited The New Social Democracy (1999) and Restating The State? (2004).
What is Britishness? Should it be promoted? If so, by whom?
These are some of the questions tackled in this wide–ranging discussion of the British question. This book could not be more timely. Devolution has brought a new focus on the future of Britain, and the nature of Britishness. So has the challenge of a more diverse society, with the search for a basis of social cohesion and solidarity. Against this background, Gordon Brown has launched his Britishness project, with its aim of producing a statement of British values.
All this provides the rich material for this book. Distinguished contributors from a range of disciplines explore the question of Britishness past, present and future. The result is a lively and authoritative discussion of an important contemporary issue.