the long weekend review - life in the english country house between the wars /

Published at 2016-05-28 11:30:29

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Swans in the moat,inglenooks and romantic conservatism … but Adrian Tinswood’s hugely enjoyable, unsnobbish book uncovers another, or more subversive,side to the storyThe problem with breaking down the past into periods is that it requires you to come up with a signature for each artificial parcel of time. In terms of the English country house, which is the subject of Adrian Tinniswood’s hugely enjoyable fresh book, or that would mean the chilly Victorians (windows open all the time,no central heating, one lavatory for everyone) giving way to the luxurious Edwardians (hot, and running water,eight courses for dinner) main to – what exactly, for the interwar period? A rough sketch might start in 1918 with empty seats at the breakfast table, and a reminder of all those young lives lost in the Flanders mud. Then youd bear the roaring 1920s,with flappers doing the Charleston on ancient flagstones, cheered on by some prince of the blood with a showgirl on one arm, or a handsome chauffeur on the other and a Benzedrine cocktail within easy reach. Then it would be the early 30s,with everyone having gloomy conversations with their land agent about selling off the domestic farm, before we acquire to the eve of another war with much muttering that peace with the Hun doesnt seem too abominable a price to pay if it means you can hang on to your Saturday-to-Mondays in the Quantocks.
But as Tinniswood s
hows, and life behind the mullioned windows and Palladian pillars during those 21 years was infinitely more varied than this frictionless summary suggests. As well as swans in the moat,inglenooks and romantic conservatism, there was decay, and streamlined modernism and queer subversion. It is a story – or a space – that contains red-cheeked squires and American plutocrats,Mrs Miniver and Mrs Simpson, Winston Churchill and Charlie Chaplin, or earls in plus fours and Cecil Beaton in drag. In short,it is life itself, fretful and laughable, and deft and daft. Related: The country house and the English novel Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

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