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| Tags: adams, england, michael, still |
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#81
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#82
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#83
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some snippage
If Rupert Brooke had substituted 'Britain' for 'England' and 'British' for 'English', then his poem would have had different cultural connotations. I have been enjoying this exchange, but would like to say that the difference would be a political emphasis. For example, I am in all political and legal definition English, yet culturally a Celt. Incidentally, the American author of Red Badge of Courage, is also an interesting analyst of these [war-time]subjects, though 'culture' is implicit rather than expicit, and the title is still a set book in American High Schools. "There is clear evidence that the concept of Englishness--the 'Englishness' of the Anglo-Saxons, as opposed to the 'Britishness' of the Celts--circulated widely in the Anglo-Saxon world. Yes. I think this is correct, however the emphasis is not of a political 'Britain or England', but a cultural one. Bede composed 'Historia Ecclesiastica Gentis Anglorum' (The Ecclesiastical History of the English People), where the 'Gens Anglorum' were deemed to be a specific and identifiable race sprung out of Saxon and Old English roots. In Bede's history, 'the English were God's new 'chosen' nation elected to replace the sin-stained Briton in the promised land of Britain.' (This belief in God's providential choice, most ably expounded by Milton in the seventeenth century, survived until the later part of the nineteenth century.) Yes again. A further definition of these two things can be found in the Church, and the schism at Farne between what might be called British Johanine early Christianity, and the later Pauline English variant, which became dominant thereafter. Thereafter much "British" language and culture took a hike, pursued by Normanidisation, to Wales, Ireland and Breton France, to return a bit transmogrified 200 years later as Romance material, until that interesting woman translated Mabinogion. The notion of Englishness itself was a religious one from the moment Pope Gregory sent Augustine to England with the mission of establishing a Church of the English, in the light of his celebrated if apocryphal remark 'non Angli sed angeli' ('Not Angles but angels'). A late seventh-century biography then declared that Gregory would lead 'gentum Anglorum' into the sight of God at the time of the Last Judgement. One of the reasons for the success of the Reformation, and the formation of the Church of England, lies in this national zeal." --Peter Ackroyd (Albion: The Origins of the English Imagination, p. xxviii) O. I anticipated your point too quickly! And someone else has read Ackroyd! I should that Ackroyd's literary record may be a deeper well than his historical one. Did you read "English Music" as a comparison? 'I will not cease from mental fight, Nor shall my sword sleep in my hand Till we have built Jerusalem In England's green and pleasant land.' --William Blake Amen. Relectantly returning to chess, Adams might feel as I do above, that he is not culturally English as a dominant, and he may elect to be more Celt or 'British" in the older sense you mention. [I don't know, and speculate]. This is not to say that this rejects what is currently 'English" and such persons as Wm. Blake, as example, have been better English extrapolators of what is British than any nominal other persons, perhaps since the Bard. It is an interesting layering of one thing on another, and both cultures seem to inform and intertwine with each other more as variants on a theme, rather than anything antithetical . Phil Innes --Nick |
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#84
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"John Rowland" wrote in
message ...(t o Eamon Warnock): "Eamon Warnock" wrote in message news:f13d778b766321f48c7de3d29b159d4e.61944@mygate .mailgate.org...(to Ivan): (snipped) Are you from USA and do you know the difference between England and Britain? (That's called a yes-and-no question.) :-D I don't think we should make fun of Americans for not knowing the flags of the different parts of the UK. It seems to me that Eamon Warnock was at most 'making fun', mildly, not so much of Americans in general but of one American troll, 'Ivan', in particular. "That country (Canada) has no culture and they want to be just like the USA anyway." --Ivan (19 September 2003, "Bobby Fischer and taxes") After all, how many of us Brits would recognise the flag of California? The flag of California has the words 'CALIFORNIA REPUBLIC' on it. Anyone who can read English should be able to identify it correctly. --Nick |
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#85
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From the chess memoirs of Richard Furness in the latest British Chess
Magazine: I used to like to have little flags besides the players at chess tournaments I ran. I felt that they emphasized the international nature of the event and would impress the sponsors and encourage them to continue their support. They also added colour for photographic interest. Usually the Lord Mayor of Manchester would open the proceedings and on one occasion, he was accompanied by his wife. As we surveyed the scene soon after the start, the Lord Mayor's wife said to me, "You have a lot of Swiss players". I was puzzled since we had none. She pointed to a flag with a cross on it. I responded by telling her that was the flag of England..Now she was puzzled. "But it isn't the Union Jack" she replied. I explained to her that the Cross of St. George was the flag of England. She remained bewildered. Chiffres |
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