Hegel in Green Wellies 
Stefan Collini
- England: An Elegy by Roger Scruton
- The Faber Book of Landscape Poetry edited by Kenneth Baker
Condition of England writing is the product of a perceived acceleration in the pace of social change. We owe the term to Carlyle, writing in the 1830s, when the ‘Condition of England Question’ largely turned on the nature of the link between a new form of economic activity (then just coming to be termed ‘industrialism’) which promised undreamed of material abundance, and a newly visible degradation in the living conditions of the urban poor. There had, of course, been forms of writing in previous centuries that had attempted to take the temperature of the body politic and in so doing to register novelty or bemoan loss. But the first half of the 19th century was confronted by what it experienced as a wholly new form of civilisation: writers such as Cobbett, Carlyle and Ruskin identified unprecedented change, which appeared to threaten a whole way of life.
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Stefan Collini’s latest book is Common Reading: Critics, Historians, Publics.
Other articles by this contributor:
HiEdBiz · The Business of Higher Education
‘No Bullshit’ Bullshit · Christopher Hitchens, Englishman
Upwards and Onwards · On Raymond Williams
Our Island Story · The New DNB