Our new issue is now live feat. @TomFStevenson in Kyiv, Florence Sutcliffe-Braithwaite on what the Welsh got right, @earlymodernjohn on a Livonian werewolf, Julian Barnes on Jacques Lartigue, Kevin Okoth on Black Marxism, and a cover by Alexander Gorlizki: https://t.co/xaTOjYd3Vr pic.twitter.com/JDniNvU2Nd
— London Review of Books (@LRB) March 30, 2022
Category Archives: Books
Preview: Times Literary Supplement – April 1, 2022
Covers: The New Criterion Magazine – April 2022
Preview: Times Literary Supplement – March 25
Interview: “Time’s Witness” Author Rosemary Hill
In the 1740s the Scots were invading England and the wearing of tartan was banned. By the 1850s, Queen Victoria had built her Gothic fantasy in Aberdeenshire and tartan was everywhere. What happened in between?
In the second episode of her series on Romantic history, Rosemary Hill talks to Colin Kidd about the myths and traditions of Scottish history created in the 19th century, and the central role of Walter Scott in forging his country’s identity.
In the first episode of a new four-part series looking at the way history was transformed in the Romantic period, Rosemary Hill is joined by Tom Stammers to consider how an argument over the ‘improvement’ of Salisbury Cathedral in 1789 launched a new attitude to the past and its artefacts. Those sentiments were echoed in revolutionary France, where antiquarians risked the guillotine to preserve the monuments of the Ancien Régime.
