ABSTRACT

A book about British cultural identities raises a number of questions: Whose Britain? Whose Culture? Whose Identity? Do a majority of people in the UK think of themselves as being British anyway? This book analyses contemporary British `cultural identity' in terms of the various and changing ways in which people who live in Britain position themselves and are positioned by their culture today.
Core chapters cover seven intersecting areas:
* place and environment
*education, work and leisure
* Gender, sex and the family
* youth culture and age
* Class and politics
* ethnicity and language
* religion and heritage
Each chapter is clearly structured around key themes, has a timeline of important dates and a list of recent British cultural examples drawn from books, films and TV programmes. In addition, there is recommended reading and exercises chosen by experienced teachers, and tables and photographs throughout.

chapter |4 pages

Culture

chapter |6 pages

Language

chapter |4 pages

Heroes 22

chapter |3 pages

Business

chapter |6 pages

British Cultural Identities structure

chapter 2|27 pages

Education, work, and leisure

chapter |11 pages

New patterns in leisure

chapter 3|3 pages

Gender, sex, and the family

chapter |6 pages

The family unit

chapter |6 pages

Women and employment

chapter |13 pages

Parenting

chapter 4|33 pages

Youth culture and style

chapter |3 pages

Cultural Examples

chapter 5|20 pages

Class and politics

chapter |10 pages

Party politics

chapter |2 pages

Exercises

chapter |2 pages

Websites

chapter 6|28 pages

Ethnicity and language

chapter |2 pages

Cultural Examples

chapter 7|34 pages

Religion and heritage