Art historian, professor, writer, spy - the extraordinary story of Anthony Blunt

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  • Опубликовано: 28 дек 2024

Комментарии • 49

  • @TheBritishAcademy
    @TheBritishAcademy  4 года назад +3

    Thank you very much for all your questions and to David for his time. Our next British Academy 10-Minute Talk will be given by Professor Richard English FBA on Wednesday 29 July, 13:00. Subscribe to our channel to be notified of this and sign up to our newsletter for updates and other interesting things to read, watch and listen: eepurl.com/gaThWL.

  • @juliaevans46
    @juliaevans46 4 года назад +8

    Thank you! Ten minutes passes by very quickly listening to an interesting talk

  • @s.alvanides9954
    @s.alvanides9954 4 года назад +10

    What a fascinating story, delivered with such gusto! Thank you :-)

  • @andyiswonderful
    @andyiswonderful Год назад +8

    I think certain members of the British Academy were grossly understating Blunt's malfeasance by saying that an Academy member should not be punished for their political beliefs. It wasn't his political beliefs that were reprehensible, but his overtly treasonous actions. The man should have been thrown in prison, but was able to wiggle out of that one. And here, some dippy members of the British Academy didn't even want to throw him out of that institution, much less throw him into prison.

    • @MrPotsy81
      @MrPotsy81 Год назад +3

      Seriously, people died because of these spies.

    • @davedraycott5779
      @davedraycott5779 20 дней назад

      Spot on he betrayed his country to a totalitarian regime and people died as a result.

  • @ahargrov1
    @ahargrov1 4 года назад +8

    Who here because of the crown

  • @glenncalderwood8945
    @glenncalderwood8945 4 года назад +2

    fascinating to listen to this essay as much for style as content

  • @chrisy6707
    @chrisy6707 2 года назад

    That was a really nice talk, thank you.

  • @emmarussell2692
    @emmarussell2692 4 года назад +2

    Thank you! Fascinating stuff. :-)

  • @peterhall728
    @peterhall728 4 года назад +8

    Upper class traitor and his only punishment is to be struck off the Queens Garden party list. Still looks after her etchings mind, priorities eh.

  • @lynnemurphy114
    @lynnemurphy114 3 года назад +3

    What an interesting man Sir A.B

    • @davedraycott5779
      @davedraycott5779 20 дней назад

      A traitor who handed secrets to Stalin’s murderous regime and will have caused the death of many.

  • @suegilmour889
    @suegilmour889 Год назад +3

    Why wasn’t Blunt imprisoned?

    • @jayjayn007
      @jayjayn007 2 месяца назад

      Royal connection

    • @johnkealy2238
      @johnkealy2238 Месяц назад

      He probably knew too much! He would have brought down the monarchy, the British government & would have probably severed ties between the UK and the United States over lapses in security!

  • @iphigenia19
    @iphigenia19 4 года назад +2

    excellent, thank you

  • @stewartellinson8846
    @stewartellinson8846 4 года назад +2

    An excellent reflection on an event which does not show the british establishment in a good light. Not so much for the outcome but for the faux outrage and posturing that it triggered. I hope history is much kinder to Sir Anthony Blunt than the Thatcher government and those who wanted to be in their good books were in the years following 1979.
    As an aside, it's good to see that the work of David Kynaston occupies a place on the shelves of Prof. Cannadine and I look forward to the next book in the series about postwar Britain.

    • @blackmore4
      @blackmore4 2 года назад +5

      How should history be "kind" to a traitor?

    • @benzflynn
      @benzflynn Год назад +2

      Sorry but he was not a Sir but a mere Mr since late 1979.

    • @andyiswonderful
      @andyiswonderful Год назад

      Spoken like a devout lefty.

    • @benzflynn
      @benzflynn Год назад

      @@andyiswonderful The Queen's advisors are hardly lefties - they are the ones who took away his Sir.
      And quite rightly too, I think.

    • @howard1beale
      @howard1beale 10 месяцев назад

      Nice comment thank you

  • @nickjung7394
    @nickjung7394 4 года назад +5

    A pity that this misguided traitor, whose actions resulted in deaths, was not forced to disclose all that he knew. I wonder why?

    • @jayjayn007
      @jayjayn007 2 месяца назад

      Royal connection

  • @fionaobrien3818
    @fionaobrien3818 3 года назад +2

    Very interesting 🧡♥️💗

  • @DuckDuck1127
    @DuckDuck1127 2 года назад

    What an excellent presentation! New subscriber.

  • @peyiots
    @peyiots 2 года назад +2

    A politico-academic version of "A very British scandal". The fissures were probably always there because British society is not, as we may often think, a completed work of art, but a geological formation, and thus both a source of its treasures and its weaknesses.

  • @TheBritishAcademy
    @TheBritishAcademy  4 года назад +2

    Thank you for tuning into Professor Sir David Cannadine’s 10-Minute Talk. After the talk, David will be available for 20-minutes to type responses to a selection of audience questions in the RUclips comments section. Please reply to this comment with any questions you may have, and he will do his best to answer as many as possible. Many thanks and we hope you enjoy the talk.

    • @TheBritishAcademy
      @TheBritishAcademy  4 года назад

      Question via email: Did you know either of the two key protagonists - Blunt and Dover?
      Answer: Although I knew quite a lot of the other people involved in the Blunt affair, I never met either Blunt or Dover. I do very much regret that as they were clearly both very clever and complex men and I would have valued the opportunity to have a conversation with them.

    • @bazejgebura2183
      @bazejgebura2183 4 года назад +1

      How is the Blunt case perceived by members of the Academy today? Is it still subject to controversy and dispute?

    • @xmoonxprincessx
      @xmoonxprincessx 4 года назад

      What do you think it is that has brought Blunt back into the public imagination and do you think anything could have been done differently in the past?

    • @TheBritishAcademy
      @TheBritishAcademy  4 года назад +1

      @@bazejgebura2183 Question via RUclips: How is the Blunt case perceived by members of the Academy today? Is it still subject to controversy and dispute?
      Answer: The Blunt affair happened 40 years ago and there are only a few Fellows of the Academy alive today who can remember those events. I suspect that the majority of Fellows don’t know much about it. But of course I hope that they will buy the book and find it worthwhile to read both on account of the story itself and the broader issues it raises.

    • @TheBritishAcademy
      @TheBritishAcademy  4 года назад +1

      @@xmoonxprincessx Question via RUclips: What do you think it is that has brought Blunt back into the public imagination and do you think anything could have been done differently in the past?
      Answer: Blunt died within a few years of the episode that the book describes, but he has had a long afterlife in fictional recreation especially in Alan Bennett’s brilliant play ‘A Question of Attribution’, to which the title of the Academy’s publication ‘A Question of Retribution?’ plays homage.

  • @benzflynn
    @benzflynn Год назад +1

    Reading on video is stupid.
    As a professional communicator, Sir David should know how to use the power of _ex tempore_ speaking on an audience.
    Overall I get a feeling that Mr Cannadine is empathetic to Blunt because of his impressive volume of work as an art historian.
    I think we all appreciate that Blunt was not a drunken cad like Burgess, nor a malcontent like Philby: his weakness was his own weakness in the face of such low characters.
    About 60 million non-members of the British Academy were given no say whatever in what _should_ be done with people like Blunt.
    Yet any organization with a national dimension, let alone with a monarch as its patron, really cannot have much alternative than summary expulsion.
    To her credit Mrs Thatcher appreciated this and had her spake on the matter.

  • @angelojorgio1170
    @angelojorgio1170 3 года назад +1

    Hi po