Available September 2025

ISBN 9781915115294  HB   £49.95  Order

ISBN 9781915115317  eB   £29.95  Order

​229 x 152 mm.  c.220 pps.

A play on the recent past

History, writing, and Stanley Middleton's novels


Carolyn Steedman

Edward Everett Root Publishers Co. Ltd.


EER

About this book 

This unusual new book by a distinguished historian highlights the pivotal question of how history is written. 
 

A Play on the Recent Past is a novel history, about the many ways there are of writing about everyday life in the past.  
 
In his 45 novels the Booker Prize winner Stanley Middleton wrote a history of daily living in Nottingham (he named the city `Beechnall’) in the second half of the 20th century. He wrote about a visual world, about violence, dialect, language and politics; above all he wrote about things. All these things and all the historians in his novels are historical gauges, placing action and people in certain historical settings.  
 
This book reveals Middleton himself as a historian. You may come to see him as `the historian’, a figure his writing embodies. And perhaps you will become as interested as Middleton was with finding ways to place his characters and the lives they lived within particular historical bounds. Perhaps you too will have become as intrigued as Carolyn Steedman with just how telling the make of a vacuum cleaner is in his writing, or what a piece of toast and Marmite, or a jug kettle, a central heating system, or a beige pullover has to say about the social world and the histories that get written about it. 


About this book 


Since 2013 Carolyn Steedman has been Emeritus Professor of History at the University of Warwick, where she was previously a Professor of History since 1999. In 2011, Steedman was elected a Fellow of the British Academy. 

Her previous books include The Tidy House (Virago, 1982); Policing the Victorian Community (Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1984); Landscape for a Good Woman (Virago, 1986); The Radical Soldier's Tale: John Pearman, 1819-1908 (Routledge, 1988 & 2016); Margaret McMillan. Childhood, Culture and Class in Britain (Virago, 1990); Past Tenses. Essays on Writing, Autobiography and History (Rivers Oram, 1992); Strange Dislocations. Childhood and the Idea of Human Interiority, 1780–1930 (Virago, 1995); Dust ( Manchester UP, 2001); Master and Servant. Love and Labour in the English Industrial Age (Cambridge UP, 2007); Labours Lost. Domestic Service and the Making of Modern England (Cambridge UP, 2009); An Everyday Life of the English Working Class. Work, Self, and Sociability in the Early Nineteenth Century (CUP, 2013).


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