- Imprint: Penguin
- ISBN: 9780141015279
- Length: 400 pages
- Price: £8.99
The Past is Never Dead
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'The past,' William Faulkner once observed, 'is never dead. It's not even past. All of us labor in webs spun long before we were born.' Indeed we do, and in this sparkling collection of recent essays, David Cannadine explores some of the many ways in which the past and the present are inextricably linked in modern Britain and beyond.
Why are so many great European and British paintings found in American art museums, far from their places of origin? Why do the 'Cambridge spies' still exert so powerful hold on the popular imagination, so long after their treachery and betrayal? Why do we remain captivated by the fogs of Sherlock Holmes's London, which were undeniably real, but rarely appeared in Conan Doyle's stories? These are some of the questions that David Cannadine poses and answers in a book ranging from the enduring interest in the paintings of Winston Churchill, via the lasting importance of biographical dictionaries, to changing attitudes to English country houses. In all these instances, and many more, the past is indeed still emphatically with us, and we neglect it at our peril.
Why are so many great European and British paintings found in American art museums, far from their places of origin? Why do the 'Cambridge spies' still exert so powerful hold on the popular imagination, so long after their treachery and betrayal? Why do we remain captivated by the fogs of Sherlock Holmes's London, which were undeniably real, but rarely appeared in Conan Doyle's stories? These are some of the questions that David Cannadine poses and answers in a book ranging from the enduring interest in the paintings of Winston Churchill, via the lasting importance of biographical dictionaries, to changing attitudes to English country houses. In all these instances, and many more, the past is indeed still emphatically with us, and we neglect it at our peril.
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- Hardback 2027
- Paperback 2028