One Fine Day
Matthew Parker
£25.00
Description
‘Breathtaking… vital and important. A wonderful read’ PETER FRANKOPAN
‘Marvellous… escapes the inane, balance-sheet view of Empire and sees its full complexity’ SATHNAM SANGHERA
‘Excellent… his mastery of detail is impeccable’ DOMINIC SANDBROOK, Sunday Times
‘Extraordinary… [brings] the world of a century ago to fresh, vivid life’ ALEX VON TUNZELMANN
THE STORY OF THE BRITISH EMPIRE AT ITS MAXIMUM TERRITORIAL EXTENT
On Saturday 29 September 1923, the Palestine Mandate became law and the British Empire now covered a scarcely credible quarter of the world’s land mass, containing 460 million people. It was the largest empire the world had ever seen. But it was beset by debt and doubts.
This book is a new way of looking at the British Empire. It immerses the reader in the contemporary moment, focusing on particular people and stories from that day, gleaned from newspapers, letters, diaries, official documents, magazines, films and novels: from a remote Pacific island facing the removal of its entire soil, across Australia, Burma, India and Kenya to London and the West Indies.
In some ways, the issues of a hundred years ago are with us still: debates around cultural and ethnic identity in a globalised world; how to manage multi-ethnic political entities; racism; the divisive co-opting of religion for political purposes; the dangers of ignorance. In others, it is totally alien. What remains extraordinary is the Empire’s ability to reveal the most compelling human stories. Never before has there been a book which contains such a wide spread of vivid experiences from both colonised and coloniser: from the grandest governors to the humblest migrants, policemen and nurses.
Publisher Review
Marvellous... escapes the inane, balance-sheet view of Empire and sees it in its full complexity * Sathnam Sanghera * Breathtaking, extraordinarily rich and beautifully written. One Fine Day is a vital and important history that is truly global in scope and ambition. A wonderful read * Peter Frankopan * An engrossing and wide-ranging account of the zenith of the British Empire - with all the contradictions, brittleness, ambition and hubris that moment entailed. Across Continents and characters, Matthew Parker provides a new, global history of British imperialism which feels both epic and immediate. * Tristram Hunt * Extraordinary. Matthew Parker's magisterial sweep through one day of British imperial history and culture plunges us into the global complexity of the British Empire, bringing the world of a century ago to fresh, vivid life. An astonishing achievement. * Alex von Tunzelmann * An epic portrait of the British Empire on the brink... Parker paints a brilliant picture, teeming with fresh faces and new voices * Jessie Childs * There is something Shakespearian about Matthew Parker's insightful argument that it was at exactly the time that the British Empire reached its greatest territorial size that the factors coalesced which were to destroy it... Parker has rendered a signal service by convincingly pinpointing the exact fulcrum moment in its half-millennium long history * Andrew Roberts * Exquisitely crafted and beautifully written, full of delicious detail and extraordinary insight * Augustus Casely-Hayford OBE, curator, cultural historian, and director of V&A East * A panoramic view of the British Empire on September 29, 1923... Parker vividly demonstrates the empire's vast reach and the 'impossibly conflicting interests between government [and] the governed' ... Accessible and sturdy, this expansive account provides solid ground for understanding the decline of the British Empire. It's an eye-opening and a unique vantage point from which to study 20th-century history * Publishers Weekly * An ambitious history of the beginning of the end of vast dominions of the British Empire on Sept. 29, 1923... a multilayered portrait, with deep contextual background... An impressive work of research and synthesis tracing the end of an empire * Kirkus * Epic in scale yet intimate in detail... a vast historical canvas on which each individual brushstroke had been brought vividly to life. A narrative triumph * Giles Milton, author of Checkmate in Berlin * An engrossing read sprung from an impressive archival sweep... Parker tells the unwieldy story of empire through a microcosm, and in so doing captures it in all its chaotic contradictions... An impressive feat that few historians are capable of * Daniel Veevers, author of The Great Defiance: How the world took on the British Empire *
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