Temperance Lives – published today

My book – Temperance Lives: Life Assurance, Drink and Medicine 1840-1918 – is published by Bloomsbury Academic today, as an ebook anyway. Think of it as a soft launch – the hardback will be out in December.

If you would like to look at the front matter, half of the introduction, and the (extensive) indexes you can do that here.

And you can find more details about the book here – you can buy the ebook on that page, with a 20% discount, and if you’re interested in pre-ordering the hardback, you can get 35% off the price if you use the discount code GLR AT8.

James Kneale

Geographer MPs

Dan Hicks shared a graph breaking down MPs’ Brexit/Remain voting in terms of the subjects they studied at university, taken from this LSE blog post. Here it is:

noah1.png

MPs with a first degree in geography turn out to be more or less as remain-y as the sample of MPs as a whole (and more remain-y than MPs with degrees in law, politics, natural science, economics etc.)

Dan was interested in the Arch and Anth MPs; I wondered who the geographers were. There were nine when the referendum took place, and after a good deal of research by , Stephen Taylor, Oliver Duke-Williams, NUGEOG, Ruth Craggs, Mary Gilmartin, Jon Swords (thanks all) we have identified eight MPs.

Conservatives:

  1. Theresa May (MP for Maidenhead; Oxford)
  2. Claire Perry (MP for Devizes; Oxford)
  3. George Freeman (MP for Mid Norfolk; Cambridge)
  4. Dr Matthew Offord (MP for Hendon; NTU, PhD KCL)
  5. Karl McCartney (MP for Lincoln, until 2017; Lampeter)

Labour:

  1. Matt Western (MP for Warwick & Leamington; Bristol)
  2. Ruth Cadbury (MP for Brentford & Isleworth; Salford)
  3. Heidi Alexander (MP for Lewisham East, Deputy Mayor of London from May 2018; Durham)

Labour MP Laura Pidcock, (NW Durham) has an MSc in Disaster Management and Sustainable Development from Northumbria University. However she has a first degree in politics from MMU and only became an MP in 2017, and doesn’t count either way.

So we’ve established eight of the nine MPs who were geographers in 2016. One lost their seat and one gave theirs up since then; I’m not sure if any new geographer MPs have been elected since.

What does it all mean? No idea. But now you know.