Our age : English intellectuals between the World Wars -- A group portrait

by Baron Noel Gilroy Annan Annan

Paper Book, 1990

Status

Available

Publication

New York : Random House/G. Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1990.

User reviews

LibraryThing member le.vert.galant
"As each generation turns to make its exit from the stage it hears a disagreeable sound. People in the audience are talking, not listening; they are indifferent to what their elders are saying on stage, worse they are uttering heresies." Thus begins a chapter entitled "Our Vision of Life Rejected."
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This pessimistic conclusion to Our Age, defined by Annan as the generation that graduated from Oxbridge between 1919 to 1951, captures the spirit of this book covering the life of a remarkable cohort of British intellectuals. It's a fascinating story, but with the exception of a few notable characters, the participants rarely come alive, just their ideas, which may be the point.

I remember the rancor this book provoked upon publication. It was too close to home at the time. With the retrospect of years, it fells less haughty and more nostalgic: a eulogy for the generation that oversaw the transition of Great Britain from an empire to a reluctant member of the European Community, a generation whose work was undone by the Thatcher revolution. Annan is an engaging and witty guide; however, the book loses steam as it moves from advances in philosophy and history to the minutia of British politics and educational reform.
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