IF walls could talk, what stories they could tell…
As historian, broadcaster and BAFTA award-winning presenter
and film-maker David Olusoga returns to BBC2 this week with his hit series, A
House Through Time, enjoy an even more in-depth look into some of the seemingly
ordinary homes which also have the history of our country embedded within their
walls.
When we move into a new house, most of us try frantically to
exorcise the lingering presence and evidence of past occupants from what is now
our space but, as Olusoga points out in the introduction to this fascinating
tie-in book, no matter how many layers of paint we slap on, we can never fully
succeed in wiping away the traces of ‘the lives that have been lived there
before us.’
And the simple truth is that it is the ordinary houses which
tell the best stories, rather than the grand public buildings and the mansions
of the rich. It is at home, behind closed doors and drawn curtains, that people
live their inner, family lives… only in domestic spaces do they become
genuinely themselves. Olusoga and his consultant for the book, Melanie
Backe-Hansen – a historian, writer, and speaker who specialises in researching
the social history of houses in the UK – lift the roofs on the nation’s
domestic spaces as house histories become the new frontier of popular,
participatory history.
SOCIAL HISTORY: Melanie Backe-Hansen |
HIT TV SERIES: David Olusoga |
Click HERE for Lancashire Post review
Economic cycles, the coming of the railways, the arrival of
new industries and decline of old ones, slavery and its abolition, world wars,
crime, class, and, topically, endemic and epidemic diseases,
all influenced the lives of the residents of these homes over the decades and centuries.
all influenced the lives of the residents of these homes over the decades and centuries.
Each chapter of the book charts developments in the history
of the British home and British cities, and explores the changing social idea
of the home, a subject which has tended to shift for as long as people have
moved house.
As with the television series, A House Through Time offers
readers not only the tools to explore the histories of their own homes, but
also details of the often surprising journey that one single house can take from
elegant dwelling in a fashionable district to a tenement for society’s rejects.
Packed with remarkable human stories, Olusoga and
Backe-Hansen’s richly detailed and informative book rewards readers with a deep
insight into living history, a history we can see every day on the streets
where we live.
And it reminds us that however interesting a home’s
architectural and wider history might be, it is the people themselves who lived
there before us, and their stories, that ‘echo through the corridors.’
(Picador, hardback, £20)
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