Anxiety and injustice: the anatomy of contemporary English nationalism* |
| |
Authors: | ARTHUR AUGHEY |
| |
Affiliation: | School of Policy Studies, University of Ulster, UK |
| |
Abstract: | ABSTRACT. An explicit and politically mobilised English nationalism has been remarkable because of its absence from deliberation on constitutional change in the United Kingdom. In short, it remains a mood and not a movement. This article explores the mood and explains why that mood has not become, as yet, a movement. It examines three related aspects of the English nationalist mood. First, it considers anxieties about the condition of contemporary England which can be found in the work of intellectuals and artists. Second, it identifies the sense of injustice which animates the lobby group the Campaign for an English Parliament. Finally, it looks at how mainstream party politics responds to these national anxieties and that sense of national injustice. |
| |
Keywords: | anxiety Britishness Campaign for an English Parliament Englishness injustice nationalism |
|
|