Sir Bernard Crick (born 16 December 1929) is a British political theorist whose views are often summarised as "politics is ethics done in public". He seeks to arrive at a "politics of action", as opposed to a "politics of thought" or of ideology.
Bernard Crick was an advisor to British Labour Party leader Neil Kinnock during the 1980s. Crick, in 1997, was appointed by his former student, David Blunkett (newly appointed as education secretary in the new Blair government) to head up an advisory group on citizenship education, which led to the introduction of citizenship as a core subject in the national curriculum. He authored the 2004 Home Office book Life in the United Kingdom: A Journey to Citizenship, which forms the basis for the new citizenship test required by all people naturalising as British citizens.
Bernard Crick is also probably the best biographer of the novelist and essayist George Orwell. His definitive biography George Orwell: A Life is the most comprehensive and objective biography of this extraordinary but often ambiguous writer. Crick sets out to examine the life of the author - warts and all - and focuses in particular on how Orwell got his books and essays published. Overall, he presents a very sympathetic portrait of his subject, giving a description of the writer's somewhat eccentric character and his struggle with poverty and initial rejection of his manuscripts. As he points out, fame only came late in Orwell's lifetime...'For most of his career he was too strapped for cash, too hard pressed earning a living by book reviewing and column journalism'. The biography also presents, in its introduction, valid insights of the biographer into Orwell's political development and political standpoint, as well as other interesting topics such as his patriotism, literary criticism and genius as an essayist and political polemicist. Crick set up the Orwell Prize for political journalism.
The "political virtues" were an important feature of Crick's classic book, In Defense of Politics; he saw them as an alternative to "ideology" or any "absolute-sounding ethic". They included but were not limited to:
1929 births | Living people | British writers | British humanists
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