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Porcupines in Winter is a collection of fascinating essays which paint a compelling picture of how Britain and British society have changed and of the challenges we face in creating stronger and more mutually supportive communities.
The book maps out the state of relationships that matter most in our daily lives including friendship, love and marriage, our relations with our children, parents, work colleagues, neighbours and strangers, the connections we make over the Internet and our identification with the virtual communities of soap operas.
Urban riots and rural gentrification; speed dating and isolate pensioners; ‘The Office’ and ‘Neighbours from Hell’; road rage and madrasas; grandparents providing childcare and children looking after other children; mentors and bloggers. These are just a few of the topics covered in this survey of the state of contemporary Britain.
Porcupines in Winter also contains portraits of places – from Grimethorpe and Shropshire to Glasgow and London’s East End, and portraits of communities – including Polish migrants and Jamaican transnational families.
Schopenhauer once described human beings as like porcupines in winter, huddling together for warmth, then pulling part when their quills pricked each other, and constantly striving for the right balance between being together and apart. Porcupines in Winter looks at how modern Britons are negotiating this difficult balance.