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Crossing borders:

political essays
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Continuum, 2001 - History - 216 pages
Few, if any, contemporary political writers can match Bernard Crick's mastery of the political essay. This collection demonstrates the vast range of his reading and writing with sparkling, pithy, erudite and witty pieces on British identity, on the Northern Irish peace process, on New Labour, on Shaw, Berlin, Laski and Arendt, and on the present (deplorable) state of political writing. Crossing Borders provides overwhelming evidence that important ideas and arguments can and most certainly should be expressed to be accessible and enlightening to the intelligent, non-specialist reader.

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Contents

The Sense of Identity of the Indigenous British
1
For My Fellow English
23
On Scottish Nationalism
37
Copyright

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About the author (2001)

Political theorist Bernard Crick was born in London in 1929. He earned a degree in economics in 1950 and a doctorate in political economy in 1956 from University College in London. He taught at numerous universities including Harvard University, McGill Univeristy, the University of California at Berkeley, the London School of Economics, the University of Sheffield, and Birkbeck College. He wrote numerous books during his lifetime including The American Science of Politics (1958), In Defence of Politics (1962), The Reform of Parliament (1964), and George Orwell: A Life (1980). He also edited the journal Political Quarterly for almost 40 years. He died from cancer on December 19, 2008 at the age of 79.

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