tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2299006518616360287.post6449050037761523535..comments2024-03-15T08:11:20.547+00:00Comments on Landscapism: Digging the English landscape of radicalism and rebellionEddie Procter (Landscapism)http://www.blogger.com/profile/10196792135158959223noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2299006518616360287.post-57993642043566924742018-09-30T12:51:55.352+01:002018-09-30T12:51:55.352+01:00These articles are exactly what I need. I really a...These articles are exactly what I need. I really appreciate for this great information, I like them very much. To me, they really help me sometimes. <br /><a href="https://autoketing.com/project/currency-converter-box" rel="nofollow">currency-converter-box-by-autoketing</a> <a href="https://apps.shopify.com/currency-converter-master" rel="nofollow">currency-converter-box-by-autoketing</a>Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12052505539737119514noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2299006518616360287.post-186990650065434822015-05-12T22:02:33.056+01:002015-05-12T22:02:33.056+01:00Thanks for this reminder. Well over a third of th...Thanks for this reminder. Well over a third of the adult population of the UK has probably been feeling pretty miserable since last Friday so I don't think we are alone. And I absolutely agree there is a powerful, perennial radical tradition in England (different traditions in Wales, Scotland and Ireland), one that has often been deeply rooted in the land, although I think my list would be a little different to yours. But the main thing I wanted to observe was that history and the landscape bear witness to the inexorability of change - the struggles of the fourteenth century were about serfdom and famine, those of the seventeenth century about limiting the power of the crown, in the nineteenth century the rise of democracy, and the twentieth century universal education and health. Raymond Williams was, I think, right to insist that for all the losses and defeats, today is better than yesterday. Admittedly his 'long revolution' is very long indeed, but it's better than no revolution at all, even if none of us are likely to live to see its completion.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com