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Black Mischief - Not Black and White

On the 60th anniversary of his death, Russell Kane delves into seven of Evelyn Waugh’s most important works. In episode 3, Black Mischief (1932) – a book about racism.

Many people hold Evelyn Waugh among the best British writers of the 20th Century -Russell Kane is one of them. To mark the 60th anniversary of his death, Russell delves into seven of Waugh’s most important works.

While Waugh has been unfashionable for some time, Kane believes it’s high time to turn back to him. He says he was way ahead of his time and, in his books, he reveals ourselves to ourselves and uncovers clues for how we should live our lives today.

Over seven episodes, Waugh tells us everything we need to know about the cluttered corridors of English culture - its class system, media, cult of masculinity, colonial hang-ups: everything it’s made of, good and bad. Not only does Waugh show our society for what it is, but he demonstrates how it can be hacked - infiltrated by savvy interlopers like himself. And Russell sees a kindred spirit.

Waugh may be a divisive figure, with the public reputation of a pantomime villain. Some say Waugh’s vitriolic streak, cultural insensitivity and idolisation of the upper classes should condemn him to the male, pale and stale literary past - but Russell believes he is prescient, not reactionary, that he was ahead of his time. Waugh holds the least flattering of mirrors up to us - and actually, it’s not Waugh but what we see that we don’t like.

In episode 3, we take Black Mischief (1932) off the shelf – a book about racism. There are two ways to view this book: was Waugh a small-minded racist or a satirical observer of the small minded-racist? This book holds the mirror up to our complex attitudes to race. Can Russell defend Waugh?

Producer: Dom Byrne & Freya Hellier
Executive Producer: Rosamund Jones
Editor: Kirsten Lass
Commissioning Editor: Dan Clarke
Sound Mix: Jon Calver

A Loftus Media production for BBC Radio 4

Release date:

14 minutes

Broadcast

  • Next Wednesday13:45