In 1987, David Cannadine concluded an essay on what he saw as the dark and doubtful state of British history with a call to 'fashion a new version of the national past which can regain its place in our general national culture, and become once again an object of international interest'. A job application posted through the unusual medium of a scholarly journal? I doubt it, but it may be that this essay found its way onto a desk at Penguin Books, leading to Cannadine's appointment, in 1988, as general editor of the new Penguin History of Britain. Eight years on - two years longer than it took to commission and publish the entire series of the old Pelican History of England (1949-55) - we see the first fruits of the appointment.
LRB 28 November 1996 | PDF Download
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