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The Undercover Revolution: How Fiction Changed Britain

Iain H Murray

Paperback 2009-02-01

Late Victorian and Edwardian Britain saw a mega-change in reading habits. For the first time fiction took the primary place in book publishing, and the medium was taken up by brilliant and entertaining authors with an agenda for "a brave new world". Such men as Thomas Hardy, H G Wells and George Bernard Shaw were the opinion-makers for coming generations. "With the next phase of Victorian fiction", wrote G. K. Chesterton, "we enter a new world; the later, more revolutionary, more continental, freer but in some ways weaker world in which we live today." Chesterton did not live to see the full consequences of the change but W R Inge predicted what was coming when he wrote:

"No God. No country. No family. Refusal to serve in war. Free love. More play. Less work. No punishments. Go as you please. It is difficult to imagine any programme which, if carried out, would be more utterly ruinous to a country situated as Great Britain is today."

FROM THE PREFACE, by Iain Murray, "My theme - the influence of fiction on society - is worthy of much more expansion than I have given to it here. I hope I have said enough to alert others to the importance of what is too commonly overlooked."

- Publisher

Publisher Description

"Iain Murray has put his finger on the turning point that sent western culture down the path to immorality. It is a persuasive explanation that we need to hear" - Pastor John MacArthur.

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Late Victorian and Edwardian Britain saw a mega-change in reading habits. For the first time fiction took the primary place in book publishing, and the medium was taken up by brilliant and entertaining authors with an agenda for "a brave new world". Such men as Thomas Hardy, H G Wells and George Bernard Shaw were the opinion-makers for coming generations. "With the next phase of Victorian fiction", wrote G. K. Chesterton, "we enter a new world; the later, more revolutionary, more continental, freer but in some ways weaker world in which we live today." Chesterton did not live to see the full consequences of the change but W R Inge predicted what was coming when he wrote:

"No God. No country. No family. Refusal to serve in war. Free love. More play. Less work. No punishments. Go as you please. It is difficult to imagine any programme which, if carried out, would be more utterly ruinous to a country situated as Great Britain is today."

FROM THE PREFACE, by Iain Murray, "My theme - the influence of fiction on society - is worthy of much more expansion than I have given to it here. I hope I have said enough to alert others to the importance of what is too commonly overlooked."

- Publisher

Publisher Description

"Iain Murray has put his finger on the turning point that sent western culture down the path to immorality. It is a persuasive explanation that we need to hear" - Pastor John MacArthur.

Koorong Code289169
ISBN1848710127
EAN9781848710122
Pages112
DepartmentAcademic
CategoryChurch History
PublisherBanner Of Truth
Publication DateFeb 2009
Dimensions8 x 119 x 178mm
Weight0.114kg