The Country and the City
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| Author | Raymond Williams |
|---|---|
| Language | English |
| Genre | Cultural studies |
| Publisher | Chatto and Windus & Spokesman Books |
Publication date | 1973 & 2011 |
| Publication place | United Kingdom |
| Media type | Print (book) |
| Pages | 336 |
| ISBN | 0-7012-1005-2 |
| OCLC | 12501469 |
| LC Class | PR409.C5 W5x 1985 |
The Country and the City is a book of cultural analysis by Raymond Williams first published in 1973. It analyses cultural concepts of the country and the city as expressed through literature from the middle ages to the present day, and especially the association of the country with innocence, virtue, and foolishness, and of the city with vice, learning, and sophistication.[1] The book challenges simplistic ideas of rural and urban, setting literary developments in the context of agricultural and industrial history, "from the dawn of English agrarian capitalism in the late Middle Ages to the global anti-colonial revolutions of the 1950s and '60s".[2] It argues that there has never been a sharp division between the country and the city, deconstructing the idea of capitalism as an external force that destroyed an idyllic rural way of life.[3]
Coming from the Welsh border, a village in the Black Mountains, Raymond Williams found that the images of rural life taught at the University of Cambridge did not match what he had seen. As an academic at Cambridge, he studied and examined the contradiction, along with the contrasting idea of the city, which in the United Kingdom has never been separate from the countryside. Rural life without cities had existed in other parts of the world, but not for a very long time in Britain.
Chapter 2, A Problem of Perspective, examines the idea that an ancient continuous rural life has recently ended. Authors generally remember this timeless order existing in their own childhood. But look at writers from the time of their childhood, and they consider that the timeless order has already vanished, having still existed in the older writer's childhood. He gives a chain of examples, going back as far as William Langland's Piers Plowman and Pope Innocent III in the fourteenth and twelfth centuries, respectively, but suggests one could continue doing so all the way back to Eden. This "escalator", as he calls it, does not serve to explain a greater narrative about pastoralism, but rather allows him to employ "precise analysis of each kind of retrospect, as it comes." (p. 12)
Urban life is also examined - see in particular chapter 19, Cities of Darkness and of Light.
