Lives and Afterlives of Enoch Powell

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Birmingham Speech
BNP
Brexit
British immigration policy
British National Party
British Nationality Law
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Category=NHD
Conservative Party
conservative revolution Brexit context
Craig Fowlie
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eq_nobargain
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EU Referendum Campaign
far-right movements UK
Fascism and the Far Right
High Tory
Immigration
Irish Citizens
Jacob Rees-Mogg
Keynesian Fordist Welfare State
media and nationalism
National Committee
National Front
Nazis
Nick Griffin
Nigel Farage
political discourse analysis
postwar conservatism
Powellite
Powellites
Provisional IRA
Race Relations Bill
race relations history
Race Relations Work
Revolt on the Right
Rivers of Blood
Runnymede Trust
TNA
Tories
UK Application
UK Independence Party
UK Membership
UK Withdrawal
UK's Acceptance
UK's Sovereignty
UKIP
UKIP Candidate
UKIP Leader
UKIP Supporter
UK’s Acceptance
UK’s Sovereignty
Ulster Unionist
Ulster Unionists
UUP Nomination
Wasp Model
Welfare Chauvinism
West Germany

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367786410
  • Weight: 294g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Mar 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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50 years after Enoch Powell’s self-styled detonation in the form of his so-called ‘Rivers of Blood’ speech, this volume brings together contributions from international scholars in the field of history, political science and British studies, with new insights from hitherto unexplored archives. It investigates some of the key national and grassroots parameters which, from above and from below, led to Powell’s violent irruption into the immigration debate in 1968. It apprehends Powell as a political and intellectual figure firmly established in the British Tory tradition, a tradition which was to shape the 1970s debate on race and immigration, and be avidly instrumentalised by the British far-right. It also analyses Powell’s positioning vis-à-vis the Irish question, and apprehends Powell’s late-1960s moment from an international standpoint, as one of the early stages of the conservative revolution which was to culminate in 2016 with Trump’s election. Lastly, this book weaves a thread between Powell and another recent political detonation: Brexit.

Olivier Esteves is Professor of British Studies at the University of Lille, France.

Stéphane Porion is senior lecturer in British Studies at the University of Tours, France.