The Abolition of Britain
1999 book by Peter Hitchens / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Abolition of Britain: From Lady Chatterley to Tony Blair (reissued in 2018 with the subtitle From Winston Churchill to Theresa May; US subtitle: From Winston Churchill to Princess Diana) is the first book by British conservative journalist Peter Hitchens, published in 1999. It examines a period of perceived moral and cultural reform between the 1960s and New Labour's 1997 general election win. Hitchens asserts that the reforms facilitated vast and radical constitutional change under Tony Blair's new government that amounted to a "slow motion coup d'état".[1] The book was cited by Gillian Bowditch in The Times as being a major modern work to dissect "the decline in British morals and manners over the past 50 years",[2] and identified by Andrew Marr in The Observer as "the most sustained, internally logical and powerful attack on Tony Blair and all his works".[3]
Author | Peter Hitchens |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Subject | Politics of the United Kingdom |
Genre | Non-fiction |
Publisher | Quartet Books |
Publication date | 1 August 1999 |
Pages | 362 |
ISBN | 0-7043-8117-6 |
Followed by | Monday Morning Blues |
Hitchens's later book The Broken Compass explored the same themes, applied to socio-political events and culture in the 2000s decade.