A review of the new book by Craig Taylor
The Independent, 30th March 2006
In 1969, Ronald Blythe published a work of non-fiction
which he thought would be received as an unassuming
social history; a snapshot of life in a small,
unexceptional Suffolk village. Much to his surprise,
Akenfield became a bestseller. Though he didn't
know it at the time, Blythe's account of this
"not particularly striking" village
captured a key moment in English rural history,
when many of the old ways were about to be swept
away by industrial agriculture, global trade,
car culture and the seductions of modernity. He
let the people of the village speak for themselves:
the book was presented as a series of stories,
told by villagers interviewed by Blythe, whose
words are transcribed as they are spoken. The
result was unique and powerful.
What became of Akenfield? The journalist Craig
Taylor's desire to find the answer led him, 35
years later, to the Suffolk village to repeat
the experiment in the age of foot-and-mouth, second
homes and teleworking. Return to Akenfield is
as fascinating, and relevant to its time, as Blythe's
original.
Like Blythe, Taylor spent several months talking
to a cross-section of the inhabitants of Akenfield
(the name is a fiction invented by Blythe, which
allowed him to amalgamate two neighbouring villages).
For a powerful snapshot of how village life has
changed, look at the contents page, which lists
the people featured and their professions. Akenfield
is populated by farriers, tower captains, horsemen,
brigadiers, ploughmen, thatchers, saddlers and
blacksmiths. Return To Akenfield gives us agricultural
college lecturers, walkers, horticulture students,
entrepreneurs and retirees. By my calculation,
Akenfield featured at least 22 villagers working
on the land or in associated trades. Return to
Akenfield features 13, four of whom do not live
or work in the village.
But this is not a Romantic lament for a dead
past. For every Akenfield-bred orchard worker
like 74-year-old Bernard Catchpole, full of memories
of cobbled boots and Suffolk Punch horses and
overflowing with knowledge about lost apple varieties,
there is a Julie Taplin, a 32-year "incomer",
much of whose time is spent with "dynamic"
working mothers and who seems puzzled that "the
local characters are quite reserved" when
they meet her.
There is an internet entrepreneur determined
to fit into Akenfield life, full of ideas about
using the web to sell locally-sourced produce.
There are managers working to re-inject character
into a pub which had been turned into an "Ikea"
by previous tenants, Polish migrant workers whose
stories have to be translated, and a bricklayer
from New Zealand who has transformed himself into
an itinerant sheep shearer. Akenfield is not dead
yet.
Nevertheless, if there is an overwhelming theme,
it is the tearing up of roots which previously
kept places like this, and the people in them,
connected to the land. Blythe himself, now 83,
warns about romanticising those roots. "People
then were extremely poor," he explains. "Their
houses were uncomfortable and damp. Children left
school very early ... it was very hard to get
away, to do anything or to be yourself, and people
worked and worked until they died."
But even the old writer can't help regretting
some of what has been lost. "When this last
generation is gone, there will be a break from
people who have had any experience of this life,"
he says. "Some of it will be missed: the
part that cannot be put into words."
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