‘It aye like London, you know’: The Brexit Novel and the Cultural Politics of Devolution
This paper takes Anthony Cartwright’s The Cut (2017) as its central focus, a novel commissioned by European publisher Peirene Press as a fictional response to the UK’s 2016 Brexit vote. I provide a discussion of what I term the ‘cultural politics of devolution’ in Cartwright’s text, suggesting that...
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doaj-7262b1633df849e79256188b47cd448c2021-08-18T11:15:06ZengOpen Library of HumanitiesOpen Library of Humanities2056-67002020-05-016110.16995/olh.463‘It aye like London, you know’: The Brexit Novel and the Cultural Politics of DevolutionChloe Ashbridge0 This paper takes Anthony Cartwright’s The Cut (2017) as its central focus, a novel commissioned by European publisher Peirene Press as a fictional response to the UK’s 2016 Brexit vote. I provide a discussion of what I term the ‘cultural politics of devolution’ in Cartwright’s text, suggesting that it offers a critique of the British centralised state form and makes demands for the decentralisation of political power. Focussed on a small deindustrialised town, The Cut is an English regional polemic exploring how uneven development played a decisive role in the outcome of the European Union referendum. Building on Doreen Massey’s insight that places are not simply physical locations but ‘articulations of social relations’ (Massey, 1994: 22), my discussion of Cartwright’s novel is concerned with the way a discursive, cultural version of ‘the North’ was mobilised ideologically as a fulcrum of the Leave vote within Brexit media and political discourse. I trace the ways in which The Cut responds to this manoeuvre in an ambivalent deployment of nostalgia as both a vehicle for regional devolution and a literary mode associated with a parochial version of ‘the North’ that continues to exist in the national imagination. As this paper demonstrates, the text equivocates between a radical nostalgia that highlights the need for constitutional reform and a reactionary turn to the industrial past. Ultimately, I propose that The Cut forecloses its own devolutionary potential in an aesthetic and thematic reliance on cultural stereotypes of Northernness, suggesting the limitations of nostalgia as a resource for constructing alternatives to the present.https://olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4622/ |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Chloe Ashbridge |
spellingShingle |
Chloe Ashbridge ‘It aye like London, you know’: The Brexit Novel and the Cultural Politics of Devolution Open Library of Humanities |
author_facet |
Chloe Ashbridge |
author_sort |
Chloe Ashbridge |
title |
‘It aye like London, you know’: The Brexit Novel and the Cultural Politics of Devolution |
title_short |
‘It aye like London, you know’: The Brexit Novel and the Cultural Politics of Devolution |
title_full |
‘It aye like London, you know’: The Brexit Novel and the Cultural Politics of Devolution |
title_fullStr |
‘It aye like London, you know’: The Brexit Novel and the Cultural Politics of Devolution |
title_full_unstemmed |
‘It aye like London, you know’: The Brexit Novel and the Cultural Politics of Devolution |
title_sort |
‘it aye like london, you know’: the brexit novel and the cultural politics of devolution |
publisher |
Open Library of Humanities |
series |
Open Library of Humanities |
issn |
2056-6700 |
publishDate |
2020-05-01 |
description |
This paper takes Anthony Cartwright’s The Cut (2017) as its central focus, a novel commissioned by European publisher Peirene Press as a fictional response to the UK’s 2016 Brexit vote. I provide a discussion of what I term the ‘cultural politics of devolution’ in Cartwright’s text, suggesting that it offers a critique of the British centralised state form and makes demands for the decentralisation of political power. Focussed on a small deindustrialised town, The Cut is an English regional polemic exploring how uneven development played a decisive role in the outcome of the European Union referendum. Building on Doreen Massey’s insight that places are not simply physical locations but ‘articulations of social relations’ (Massey, 1994: 22), my discussion of Cartwright’s novel is concerned with the way a discursive, cultural version of ‘the North’ was mobilised ideologically as a fulcrum of the Leave vote within Brexit media and political discourse. I trace the ways in which The Cut responds to this manoeuvre in an ambivalent deployment of nostalgia as both a vehicle for regional devolution and a literary mode associated with a parochial version of ‘the North’ that continues to exist in the national imagination. As this paper demonstrates, the text equivocates between a radical nostalgia that highlights the need for constitutional reform and a reactionary turn to the industrial past. Ultimately, I propose that The Cut forecloses its own devolutionary potential in an aesthetic and thematic reliance on cultural stereotypes of Northernness, suggesting the limitations of nostalgia as a resource for constructing alternatives to the present. |
url |
https://olh.openlibhums.org/article/id/4622/ |
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