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Ladybird Books offer a blueprint for post-Covid Britain

We could do worse than to seek inspiration from Ladybird’s postwar utopian vision. Credit: Ladybird

February 5, 2021 - 4:14pm

In the 2003 German comedy film Goodbye Lenin!, a son engineers an elaborate scheme to conceal from his committed Communist mother the fact that the Soviet Bloc had collapsed while she was in a coma. As a parent, the same temptation has often occurred to me with Ladybird Books. Reading them now, the world they portrayed — as highlighted by Ladybird collector Helen Day’s excellent Twitter account — seems both familiar and unattainable. In both time and aesthetic, the quietly homely drabness of my 1980s childhood memories is closer to Ladybird’s idealised postwar townscapes than to the scruffy, blighted high streets of today.

Ladybird’s Adventures from History series presents the Whiggish, “Our Island Story” version of British history attractively. A national mythology with a dash of flag-waving heroism unimaginable in modern children’s books: the world of Drake and Nelson and Scott, with the Union Jack fluttering defiantly in some distant clime at the climax of an improving tale of risk-taking adventure and personal fortitude. 

The What to Watch For in Spring/Summer/Autumn/Winter series places Britain’s natural bounty in harmony with a rural world undergoing going great change, capturing for posterity perhaps the perfect balance between man, machine and nature. Visions of the small farmer puttering his way on his Ferguson tractor across his fields, swallows and curlews flying over him in now-unimaginable profusion; the rural labourer laying his hedges in winter as his real-life counterpart was ripping them out for government grants; ripe hay stacked by hand in small fields rich with butterflies and wildflowers; the cowherd leading his charges back along the winding lane to their barn at dusk.

Yet alongside this timeless bucolic vision was another Ladybird world of technological optimism, even futurism: Macmillan’s Tory paternalist dirigisme and Wilson’s white heat of technology forging their way into children’s bedtime reading in gleaming visions of nuclear power plants, high speed rail networks and supersonic aircraft. While affluent young families potter about in the gigantic gardens of their new suburban homes with their young children, or shop for groceries in the then modernist (and now retrofuturist) high streets of their local towns, new roads, tower blocks and factories spring up across Ladybird Britain — life was good, and the future was yet to lose its appeal.

Now that a certain degree of dirigisme seems to be in the air again, we could do worse than seek inspiration from Ladybird’s postwar utopian vision for rebuilding Britain after Covid. What if we could combine the High Modernist optimism and can-do attitude of the postwar interventionist state with the bucolic romanticism of a landscape restored to nature, and farming on a gentler, and more human scale? British politics has been short on positive visions for decades, so why not this one?

Imagine the Britain of 2040: you’re commuting on your high-speed Maglev train from the northeastern metropolis to your government-subsidised mansion flat in a now much-expanded London. Outside the window, woodsmoke curls above the reforested oak woods of Yorkshire from a million new smallholdings. The countryside is both wilder and more populated: the cities cleaner, greener, buzzing with the optimism of the new industries and the wealth they have spread to every corner of our united island nation. 

We are the richest country in Europe, our food and landscapes the glory of the continent, our scientific endeavours the envy of the world. The time of Covid, like the debilitating culture wars of the past, is remembered, if at all, as the springboard for the optimistic world of today: a bucolic, Anglofuturist British utopia, built on a nostalgia for modernity. If “Building Back Better” isn’t just to be another empty slogan, we’ll need a positive and attractive vision of the future to organise our great national task around: in this role, I humbly suggest Ladybird Book Britain 2040.


Aris Roussinos is an UnHerd columnist and a former war reporter.

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Nigel Clarke
Nigel Clarke
3 years ago

Haha..did you have an afternoon spare Aris?

Whenever I open a Ladybird book I want to go and live in it.

Ralph Windsor
Ralph Windsor
3 years ago
Reply to  Nigel Clarke

Puffin picture books had the same effect, perhaps in a more upmarket way!

Jon Redman
Jon Redman
3 years ago

the cities cleaner, greener, buzzing with the optimism of the new industries and the wealth they have spread

Mmm, y’see the problem is you can’t actually have green and wealthy. Green entails costs and statism, with the usual impacts on living standards. I don’t know if they’re still stupid enough to say it out loud, but ecofascists used to want to reduce the size of the economy, i.e. they wanted permanent recession. This necessarily implies ever-rising unemployment and poor people dying in poverty. When this was pointed out to them they stopped talking about it.

3/10 as a troll attempt.

jonmcgov72
jonmcgov72
3 years ago
Reply to  Jon Redman

Yankee go home

David J
David J
3 years ago

Interesting idea, though I can do without the tower blocks depicted in the illustration.
On balance I’ll stay in the Cotswolds.

Sean Meister
Sean Meister
3 years ago

Well yes we could have that but why bother when we can flood our Green and Pleasant Land with Low-IQ immigrants and increase wealth inequality to the point that there is no Middle Class anymore. Only the Haves and Have-Nots. Oh and let’s not forget to demolish the greenbelt for more cookie cutter new builds that deteriorate at a faster rate than any human dwelling has in the history of Britain.

Ah yes the future of Britain is bright indeed.

Jack Walker
Jack Walker
3 years ago

Can I please have some of what you are drinking ;o)

Fraser Bailey
Fraser Bailey
3 years ago

He’s really lost it this time, hasn’t he?

Kelly Mitchell
Kelly Mitchell
3 years ago

Uh, post-Covid? Yeah, it’s not going away, mate. Eventually we’ll force the technocratic fiends to let us live with it instead of cowering in fear of this nothing-burger fear porn garbage.
Time to end this shit.
It is naked f*****g evil.

Caroline Galwey
Caroline Galwey
3 years ago

Woodsmoke?

Scott Carson
Scott Carson
3 years ago

It was me, sneaking a fag behind the bike sheds. 😁
(mind you, that will probably be a crime punishable by death in 2040.)

Jonathan Jones
Jonathan Jones
3 years ago

Good luck with that.

Derek M
Derek M
3 years ago

If “Building Back Better” isn’t just to be another empty slogan, we’ll need a positive and attractive vision of the future direction from the World Economic Forum, the global elite and the Chinese Communist Party (oh and the end of democracy and prosperity)

Jake C
Jake C
3 years ago

I approve,some of the comments here are sniggering.But we absolutely must have an attitude of economic development and industrial policy if we want to become a better,wealthier country.maybe even as good as Germany or Japan.
There’s no reason why we shouldn’t be investing as much as south korea in R&D.
We should have a banking system like the German one,which supports Small and medium enterprises and not just blow up property businesses.
We should aim to be the home of cutting edge scientific development, of the latests most advanced technology.we should have great domestic world beating firms like the US and Germany.we should want to be a world competitor in the space race,space industry,maybe even a leader-if we organise ourselves correctly.

Johnny Sutherland
Johnny Sutherland
3 years ago
Reply to  Jake C

We should have a banking system like the German one,which supports Small and medium enterprises and not just blow up property businesses.

Just one word – Wirecard

Penny Gallagher
Penny Gallagher
3 years ago
Reply to  Jake C

We still need farms and countryside not just as an afterthought.

isobel
isobel
3 years ago

I agree, excellent vision for our future. Describe it then put all the elements in place to make it happen.

Penny Gallagher
Penny Gallagher
3 years ago

I agree wholeheartedly with the idea. We need a myth to unite us. An aspiration at any rate.

Steve Gwynne
Steve Gwynne
3 years ago

I’m in 👍🇬🇧💗🌍

Stephen Follows
Stephen Follows
3 years ago

Bruno Fernandes should stick to playing football.