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Christopher Hill

The Life of a Radical Historian

Michael Braddick

$69.99

Hardback

Forthcoming
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English
Verso
29 July 2025
Christopher Hill was one of the leading historians of his generation. His work across more than fifteen books and dozens of articles fundamentally rewrote the way we understand the English Revolution and the development of the modern British state. While his career brought many of the trappings of establishment respectability - he was both a Fellow of the British Academy and the Master of Balliol College, Oxford - he was also seen as a threat to that very same establishment. Under surveillance by the security services for decades, in the 1980s Hill was publicly accused of having been a Soviet agent during the war. His was a Cold War life, as well as a scholarly one.

In this brilliant work of biography, Michael Braddick charts Hill's development from his abandonment of the respectable, provincial Methodism of his youth, through his embrace of Marxism, to his membership and eventual break with the Communist Party, as well as his celebrated intellectual career. While many of his books - not least the thrilling work of historical resurrection The World Turned Upside Down and God's Englishman, his classic biography of Oliver Cromwell - are still widely read and admired, his intellectual reputation was damaged by sustained academic criticism in the politically charged atmosphere of the 1980s.

Braddick's judicious biography not only situates Hill's life and work in their historical context but seeks to rescue Hill for a new generation of readers.
By:  
Imprint:   Verso
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 153mm,  Spine: 23mm
Weight:   477g
ISBN:   9781839760778
ISBN 10:   183976077X
Pages:   320
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Acknowledgments Preface 1 Methodism, Modernism, Marxism and the Crisis of Bourgeois Culture: 1912-36 2 Academic Life, Communism and the Authentic Self: 1936-40 3 Fighting the Wrong War: 1939-45 4 Cold War, Marxism and the British Past: 1945-53 5 Personal and Political Crises: 1953-7 6 Science, Radicalism, Revolution and Progress: 1957-65 7 Master of Balliol and Modernisation in British Universities: 1965-9 8 Youth Culture and Student Rebellion: 1969-78 9 Retirement, Revisionism and the Experience of Defeat: 1978-2003 10 The Past and the Present Acknowledgements A Note on Citations Notes Index

Michael Braddick is a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, having previously worked at the University of Sheffield. He has held academic positions and visiting Fellowships in the United States, Australia, France, and Germany. He has written extensively on state formation, the English Revolution and political engagement and agency in early modern England, Ireland and the British Atlantic. His books include The Common Freedom of the People: John Lilburne and the English Revolution, God's Fury, England's Fire: A New History of the English Civil Wars, and A Useful History of Britain: The Politics of Getting Things Done.

Reviews for Christopher Hill: The Life of a Radical Historian

A fascinating portrait of a remarkable scholar. Works as both a judicious assessment of a major historian and a riveting tale of a don's life -- Jonathan Healey, author of <i>The Blazing World</i> Braddick gives us for the first time the whole man, vividly recovering the personal and political concerns that informed Christopher Hill's historical writings -- David Norbrook, author of <i>Writing the English Republic</i> A splendid biography. Even those who know Hill's work will learn a great deal. Braddick reveals Hill as a profound historical thinker and a vital voice in contemporary discussions of the English Revolution -- John Rees, author of <i>The Fiery Spirits</i> Braddick has written a fine life of Christopher Hill - lucid, fair and scholarly. -- Tristram Hunt * Literary Review * It is good to have this biography of one of the 20th century's greatest and most significant Marxist historians. -- Richard J Evans * New Statesman * A very good place to revive the discussion of Hill's vision of the English Revolution, warts and all. -- John Rees * Counterfire *


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