Estates: An Intimate History

Paperback / softback

Main Details

Title Estates: An Intimate History
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Lynsey Hanley
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback / softback
Pages:288
Dimensions(mm): Height 197,Width 128
Category/GenreBritish and Irish History
ISBN/Barcode 9781783783823
ClassificationsDewey:363.58509410904
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher Granta Books
Imprint Granta Books
Publication Date 4 May 2017
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Lynsey Hanley was born and raised just outside of Birmingham on what was then the largest council estate in Europe, and she has lived for years on an estate in London's East End. Writing with passion, humour and a sense of history, she recounts the rise of social housing a century ago, its adoption as a fundamental right by leaders of the social welfare state in the mid-century and its decline - as both idea and reality - in the 1960s and '70s. Throughout, Hanley focuses on how shifting trends in urban planning and changing government policies - from Homes Fit for Heroes to Le Corbusier's concrete tower blocks, to the Right to Buy - affected those so often left out of the argument over council estates: the millions of people who live on them. What emerges is a vivid mix of memoir and social history, an engaging and illuminating book about a corner of society that the rest of Britain has left in the dark.

Author Biography

Lynsey Hanley was born in Birmingham and now lives in London. She regularly writes for the Observer, Telegraph, New Statesman and many others. Estates: An Intimate History is her first book.

Reviews

A rich, thought-provoking book * Observer * Estates, a journey through the world of British social housing, is both a history and a personal reckoning * Financial Times * A wonderful book ... explains with verve and insight how one's mental landscape is moulded by physical environment ... Simple lessons for planners, architects and developers leap off the pages * Guardian * Lynsey Hanley's vivid, powerful book is about a dream gone sour. Her descriptions of hopelessness, drunkenness and yobbery in Tower Hamlets cry out to be engraved by a new Hogarth * Independent * Hanley's Estates is many things - social history, memoir, mild polemic ... she catalogues her experience in a manner that is honest, informed and never whimsical. A well-timed and truthful book * Daily Telegraph * [A] celebrated slice of myth-busting * Metro *