Along the Borders

£20.00

Searching for a sense of national and personal identity in an increasingly fragmented United Kingdom, this book merges British history with contemporary politics and culture. Collett’s journey takes him to the banks of the River Tamar – a natural boundary dividing Anglo-Saxon Devon from Celtic Cornwall for a thousand years, to the English-Welsh borders, where Offa’s Dyke has separated the two countries since the 8th century. He then travels north to the Anglo-Scottish borderlands, Orkney and Shetland, and across the Irish Sea to Northern Ireland. Richard Collett speaks to a cast of characters including Cornish nationalists, Welsh speakers teaching Welsh in England, and migrant charity workers helping refugees. For the first time in centuries, Brexit and the pandemic made hard borders an unprecedented reality.

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SKU: 9781529935882 Category: Tags: ,

Description

This is a book about how our borders and boundaries are bridged, and how they bring us together.

‘Thoroughly entertaining . . . Along The Borders shows us the borders of the British Isles with all their frustrations, idiosyncrasies and downright stupidities’
Alan Cleaver, author of The Postal Paths

‘An absorbing journey across the fractured frontiers of the United Kingdom, Along the Borders is packed with intriguing details, revealing insights and flashes of hope’
Shafik Meghji, author of Small Earthquakes

Nationalities are often strongest on the border, where people define themselves in opposition to their neighbours. Flags fly, dialects become stronger, and the distance between ‘us’ and ‘them’ grows. But borderlands are also the spaces in between, where centuries of history and culture merge and collide to create complex and shifting identities.

Along the Borders chronicles Richard Collett’s multi-year journey, by bus, boat, train, plane, car and on foot, through hundreds of miles of borderlands. But this is not just a book about the United Kingdom’s borders and boundaries: it’s about the people that live there. Collett speaks to a vivid cast of characters, from nationalists to town criers, from pub landlords to battle reenactors, and charity workers helping refugees on a search for national and personal identity in an increasingly fragmented United Kingdom.

By looking to the borderlands, we can discover the essence of what Britain is and what it isn’t. What it has been and what it can be.

‘A must read for anyone interested in British culture, politics and identity’
Daniel Stables, author of Fiesta

Read a sample here

Additional information

Weight 0.426 kg
Dimensions 22.4 × 14.6 × 3 cm
Author

Publisher

Imprint

Cover

Hardback

Pages

336

Language

English

Edition
Dewey

941 (edition:23)

Readership

General – Trade / Code: K