The MonarchyChatto & Windus, 1990 - 42 síður Part of a series, this book submits a proposal for the admission of republican principles into the national debate. The author examines the Royals as a national fetish that encourages servile but also snobbish attitudes. He calls for constitutional and political reform. |
From inside the book
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Síða 13
... obvious here ; that without Oliver Cromwell there might well not have been a Parliament to which Our Sovereign Lady might make her gracious address . ( Until the mid 1960s , admittedly , the Palace of Westminster was a royal palace ...
... obvious here ; that without Oliver Cromwell there might well not have been a Parliament to which Our Sovereign Lady might make her gracious address . ( Until the mid 1960s , admittedly , the Palace of Westminster was a royal palace ...
Síða 39
... obvious solution . Keep them apart . Humans should not worship other humans at all , but if they must do so it is better that the worshipped ones do not occupy any positions of political power . We had another chance to contem- plate ...
... obvious solution . Keep them apart . Humans should not worship other humans at all , but if they must do so it is better that the worshipped ones do not occupy any positions of political power . We had another chance to contem- plate ...
Aðrar útgáfur - View all
The Monarchy: A Critique of Britain's Favourite Fetish Christopher Hitchens Takmarkað sýnishorn - 2012 |
Common terms and phrases
actually admirable already alternative appeal argue argument become Blasts Britain British ceremonial Charles CHATTO Church claim comes common Commonwealth compromise Constitution continuity course Crown cult Dream duty early Edward effect England English essential Establishment example exercise fact False fetish followed force foreign give given glamour happen head hereditary honourable House human idea institution Issue keep King George Kingdom land later least Lloyd look Macmillan magic matters mind Ministers monarchy mystery never objective obvious opinion pageantry Palace Parliament past person political position practice precedent preferable prerogative present President Prince of Wales principle probably Queen question reason recent reign Royal Family royalist royalty sacred servility social society sort Sovereign subjects symbol things thought told tone tradition true turn United whole Windsor wrote