? Sevilla no es solo un lugar, es un enigma renovado en cada mirada que nunca se deja atrapar del todo. ¿Se trata de una ciudad real o de un decorado de sueños? Punto de llegada, partida y encuentro a lo largo de los siglos, morada de distintas civilizaciones y culturas, Sevilla es una fuente inagotable de leyendas, historia y personajes memorables. La escritora sevillana Eva Diaz Perez se ha propuesto abordarla en una biografia literaria, historica, cultural y critica. Los sentidos, la memoria, las curiosidades y anecdotas, los grandes hechos y los pequeños, nada se ha dejado al margen en el retrato de una ciudad mitificada y exaltada, pero tambien victima de lugares comunes y juicios parciales. Desde los ecos del mitico lago Ligustino hasta la Sevilla de los Descubrimientos, de los alminares andalusies a los palacios barrocos y de los poetas del 27 a la ciudad contemporanea bienvenidos al encuentro del esplendor y la miseria, lo oficial y lo transgresor, lo sagrado y lo profano. Un relato sensible y evocador que desentraña las sucesivas capas de un ente casi vivo, donde guerreros, reinas, herejes, santas o poetas vivieron y le dieron aliento a un mito universal. ?
The Battle of George Square, a riot during the Forty Hours Strike in Glasgow, on 31 January 1919, is routinely claimed to be one of the most iconic events in Scottish working-class history. It is also the most mythologised. For a century, the narrative created for the defence of the strike leaders charged with incitement to riot an unprovoked attack on a peaceful crowd as an act of oppression has been repeated uncritically by academic and popular writers. Mythology has almost completely replaced reality, most notably in the Scottish education system, where educational materials have been described by two prominent historians as, arrant propaganda and a perversion of history. Now, Gordon Barclay and Louise Heren have undertaken a meticulous examination of the contemporary evidence to tell a more complex story. In doing so they examine the ways writers have failed to subject the celebratory mythology of this iconic event to adequate scrutiny. They document the creation of the mythology, from the writings of the strike leaders to those who use the mythology of the Battle to promote their own politics. They also examine the legal basis and reality of the military deployment to Glasgow in the aftermath of the riot.
Searing heat, political turmoil, revolution in popular culture: relive the scorching year of 1976 in all its glory.On the political scene, Harold Wilson abruptly resigned as prime minister; Liberal Party leader Jeremy Thorpe resigned in advance of his arrest and sensational Old Bailey trial for conspiracy and incitement to murder; and the Tories elected Milk Snatcher Margaret Thatcher as their party leader. The IRAs long-running demands for the reunification of Ireland exploded into a campaign of wholesale terrorism on the British mainland.Meanwhile, the Black Panther was finally arrested and brought to justice, and the curious case of John Stonehouse, the UKs last Postmaster General, came to its climax.Throw in the fact that Southampton defied 500:1 odds to win the FA Cup, and the irresistible rise of punk rock, triggered by the iconic moment when the Sex Pistols were let loose on an unsuspecting teatime-television audience, and 1976 proves itself a truly pendulum year that divides the old from the new - recaptured here in fully living, human detail.Inside 1976:Season-by-season account of the events of this bumper year Stories from across the UK, USA, Europe and the Soviet UnionPolitical rivalries in a Cold War era, including the early rise of Margaret Thatcher and the demise of Harold Wilson Celebrities of the era, including David Bowie, Sid James and the Sex Pistols, ABBA and the Bee Gees Massive breakthroughs in criminal justice, such as the arrest of the Black Panther, and the conclusion of the case of postmaster general John StonehouseLeaving no stone unturned and no story untold, *1976* is a book of pure nostalgia for those who lived through it, and an eyeopening experience for those who didnt: a page turner right to the end.