Added by: Maria | Karma: 3098.81 | Non-Fiction | 16 August 2008
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To his mother, Queen Victoria, he was “poor Bertie,” to his wife he was
“my dear little man,” while the President of France called him “a great
English king,” and the German Kaiser condemned him as “an old peacock.”
King Edward VII was all these things and more, as Hibbert reveals in
this captivating biography. Shedding new light on the scandals that
peppered his life, Hibbert reveals Edward’s dismal early years under
Victoria’s iron rule, his terror of boredom that led to a lively social
life at home and abroad, and his eventual ascent to the throne at age
59. Edward is best remembered as the last Victorian king, the monarch
who installed the office of Prime Minister.
Global Metaphors: Modernity and the Quest for One World
The advent of the twentieth century saw an incredible advance in scientific technology. By the inter-war period of the 1920s and early 1930s cars, planes and radios were a part of everyday life, and science became a popular cult for a new age. Faith in science surged amidst an atmosphere of intellectual and social crisis.
Jo-Anne Pemberton looks in detail at the rhetoric used by the political classes of the time that propagated a vision of a new global unity, and reveals the way in which those same metaphors and imagery are used today in the rhetoric of globalization. Then, as now, the idea of "one world" was challenged by notions of manyness and multiplicity.
Drawing parallels between then and now, "Global Metaphors" reveals how much of the appeal of globalization rhetoric relies on shimmering technological fantasies about the future. Today this also incorporates images of the environment which are used to reinforce the idea of an interconnected world. While this seductive imagery is impelled at one level by the romance of scientific invention, Pemberton reveals the way in which it is also used to cement particular political, economic and cultural interests as universal goods. Arguing that our current debate about globalization is in effect a rerun of the same debate from the inter-war period, she explores why globalist thinking gains currency at particular moments in history, and looks beyond this to the interests, values and cultural biases it belies.
The book explores many similarities between early twentieth century discussions of modernity and late twentieth century debates about post modernity