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Noel Gilroy Annan, Baron Annan (1916–2000)

Author of The Dons: Mentors, Eccentrics and Geniuses

7+ Works 388 Members 2 Reviews

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Image credit: Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge

Works by Noel Gilroy Annan, Baron Annan

Associated Works

The Way We Live Now (1874) — some editions — 3,216 copies, 64 reviews
Personal impressions (1980) — Foreword, some editions — 243 copies
Granta 30: New Europe (1990) — Contributor — 153 copies, 2 reviews
Kim [Norton Critical Edition] (1900) — Contributor — 144 copies, 4 reviews
Founders and Followers (1992) — Contributor — 15 copies, 1 review

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6 reviews
"As each generation turns to make its exit from the stage it hears a disagreeable sound. People in the audience are talking, not listening; they are indifferent to what their elders are saying on stage, worse they are uttering heresies." Thus begins a chapter entitled "Our Vision of Life Rejected." This pessimistic conclusion to Our Age, defined by Annan as the generation that graduated from Oxbridge between 1919 to 1951, captures the spirit of this book covering the life of a remarkable show more cohort of British intellectuals. It's a fascinating story, but with the exception of a few notable characters, the participants rarely come alive, just their ideas, which may be the point.

I remember the rancor this book provoked upon publication. It was too close to home at the time. With the retrospect of years, it fells less haughty and more nostalgic: a eulogy for the generation that oversaw the transition of Great Britain from an empire to a reluctant member of the European Community, a generation whose work was undone by the Thatcher revolution. Annan is an engaging and witty guide; however, the book loses steam as it moves from advances in philosophy and history to the minutia of British politics and educational reform.
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Published in the 1950s, this isn’t a conventional biography as such, but an attempt to give you access to the mind and thinking of its subject, Leslie Stephen. The first few chapters give a brief autobiographical outline (barely mentioning the fact that Stephen was the father of two very talented daughters, Virginia Woolf and Vanessa Bell). Then goes on to give you in- depth disquisitions on the matters that formed and shaped Stephen throughout his life. Religion, rationalism, agnosticism, show more morality, and literary criticism. Not a volume for a single read, but rich in information about the thought and ideas of an era. show less

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Works
7
Also by
5
Members
388
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Rating
4.1
Reviews
2
ISBNs
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