Selected Product: | Watching the English: The Hidden Rules of English Behaviour Paperback Author: Kate Fox Publisher: Hodder & Stoughton Release Date: April 2005 ISBN-10: 0340818867 ISBN-13: 9780340818862 List Price: £8.99 Average Customer Rating: | | How to be a Brit: A George Mikes Minibus ISBN-10: 0140081798 The English: A Portrait of a People ISBN-10: 0141032952 Brit-think, Ameri-think: A Transatlantic Survival Guide ISBN-10: 0142001341 The Xenophobe's Guide to the English (Xenophobe's Guides) ISBN-10: 1906042292 The How to be British Collection ISBN-10: 0952287013 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Watching the English: The Hidden Rules of English Behaviour by Kate Fox (ISBN-10: 0340818867, ISBN-13: 9780340818862). At this time we have not yet written a review for Watching the English: The Hidden Rules of English Behaviour by Kate Fox (ISBN-10: 0340818867, ISBN-13: 9780340818862). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com Patronising, one dimensional | Customer Rating: | | I was given this by a Canadian colleague to read. She thought it was hysterical. I am irked that those from abroad will take this as truth. The "class system" here is ever changing and we really are not so archaic as this book would have others believe. We are not the quaint, backward group of red bus riding, "Blimey Guvnor" people that this book would have them believe. I think that this book has put us back 50 years. | Accurate but poor presentation | Customer Rating: | | I think this is the most accurate book on English culture that I have read for a while. The main draw-back is the small dense font and academic style of the book. For non-natives I think this book would be too daunting to tackle. | Fox gets 'Margaret Mead' award from goths | Customer Rating: | This can be a helpful book for foreigners living in the UK who struggle with simple things like getting served in pubs because the etiquette here is often subtly different. Kate Fox does a good job at explaining the how and why of all that.
In places Watching the English is brilliantly insightful, but most of the points are laboured. I feel the book ought to have been about 1/3 as long.
It is very funny in places, but by far the funniest is that the author was 'Margaret Mead'-ed by the goths she spoke to. They cleverly told her hilarious rubbish ("You have to grow your hair long when you're a goth - people know you haven't been a goth very long if you have short hair"!), she believed it was an accurate portrayal of the subculture, no editor questioned it and you can read it all in the book. Brilliant. | Understanding ourselves | Customer Rating: | | I recommend this book to anyone coming to England who wants to understand the locals and their strange behaviour. This book is a treasure. before I went to live in Africa I studied some social anthropology and how to prepare for culture shock. Here is the social anthropology of the English. It is acutely observed, fascinating and funny. I shall not forget the ironic gnome, the social differences in front and back gardens, how we apologise when others are in the wrong or the place we never queue. Most of us are seen as social climbers but the real upper and lower classes know their places and are secure in them. | Unbearable | Customer Rating: | I have never been compelled to review anything before, but this really is utter dross and people need to be warned to steer clear of it, unless perhaps you enjoy a spot of casual bigotry, Daily Mail reading or similar activities. A hideous mish-mash of 'pop anthropology' and aspiration to genuine academia is best summarised by a footnote which refers to a paper that the author herself wrote, which in the context of a supposed light read seems rather pretentious, except don't worry: 'the paper is 'alot less pompous than the title makes it sound'. Well thanks for that little disclaimer, I would now rush out and find it, were I not already totally convinced of your pomposity thanks to reading the rest of Watching the English. The book is a supposed overview of English etiquette, habits and behaviour: it doesn't fail totally in this respect, except that most English people would realise it all already, and most foreigners would be put off by the length and needless detail. But it is the tone of the book that is, as the review title says, unbearable. I would hate to meet this woman. I cannot believe that she would ever want to mix with the 'lower classes', as she repeatedly calls them. An undeniable tone of snootiness permeates every page, and if you scan through the pages to see how many times the word 'I' appears, as I did when I first realised what was putting me off, you shouldn't be surprised to learn that she really does think alot of herself, and her husband who graduated with a First from Oxford, as she wastes no time in telling us. Please leave it on the shelf.
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