Pubs for the people

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A01=Amit Singh
A01=Sivamohan Valluvan
Admiral Taverns
Author_Amit Singh
Author_Sivamohan Valluvan
Bethnal Green
Big Zuu
breweries
Brexit
British institutions
Campaign for Real Ale
CAMRA
Category=JBCC1
Category=JHBS
Category=KNSB
Category=NHTB
Cayman Islands
Clarkson's Farm
community bonds
consumerism
desi pubs
Drinking culture
Englishness
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
far-right politics
forthcoming
gastropubs
Glassy Junction
Greene King
Hop and Scotch
individualism
Jeremy Clarkson
Malcolm X
migration
multiculturism
nationalism
nationalist-populism
Nigel Farage
Northern Quarter
Old Blue Last
popular culture
private equity
pub closures
public houses
pubs
Punch Taverns
racism
Restoring the British Pub
riots
Rochdale
Sam Smiths
social infrastructure
socialising
Southall
Stonegate
Tamworth Tap
the British boozer
the City Arms
The Crooked House
The Farmer's Dog
the Hare
Tim Martin
Wetherspoons

Product details

  • ISBN 9781526194541
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Oct 2026
  • Publisher: Manchester University Press
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A heartfelt case for why the English pub still matters and how we can save it.

In Pubs for the people, Amit Singh and Sivamohan Valluvan offer a daring defence of the humble public house, waging battle against those who see the pub only as a poignant symbol of a bygone England.

Making a journey into the nation’s living room, they blend tales of Singh’s father – the founder of London’s first ‘Desi pub’ – with a lively travelogue that carries them from a hipster nightmare in Shoreditch to an izakaya-inspired Eccles pub run by migrants from Hong Kong. Along the way, they take on private equity, yuppie gentrifiers and culture-war blowhards who use the pub as a prop for their rage-baiting patriotism.

Life today can seem lonelier, angrier and poorer than it did before. But as Singh and Valluvan show, the pub offers the inviting prospect of a more equal, sociable and comfortably multiracial England.

Sivamohan Valluvan is a sociologist at the University of Warwick. He is the author of The Clamour of Nationalism: Race and Nation in Twenty-First-Century Britain (2019). His writing has appeared in the Guardian, Renewal, Salvage, Red Pepper and Progressive Review.

Amit Singh is a sociologist at University College London. He is the author of Cancelled Futures: Class, Race, and Place in Post-Industrial Britain (2026). He would, in another life, have been a fourth-generation publican.

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