A People's History of London

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ISBN
9781844678556
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The global city of revolutionaries and radicals in exile, in a new history-from-below.
Hub of empire, world port and seat of government, London has a political history that is nevertheless entwined with the lives of its people, a multitude often dismissed throughout the centuries as a mob. This gripping new counter-history reveals how London's poor and its immigrant population have shaped its history and identity over the ages: from apprentices closing the city gates on Charles I in the 1640s to modern fights against fascism and racism in Cable Street and Notting Hill. A People's History of London takes us into an unofficial, half-hidden and often undocumented world, a city rarely glimpsed: of pamphleteers, agitators, exiles, demonstrations and riots; the city of Wat Tyler, Marx and Engels, Garibaldi and Gandhi; and the countless pubs, theaters, coffee-houses and meeting-places in which radical ideas have been nurtured and revolutions planned.
More Information
Weight 0.488000
Author Rees John
Availability IP
Department Travel Writing
Format Paperback
ISBN 9781844678556
Pages 320
Published 19/06/2012
Publisher Verso
Section Travel Writing: General
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