Dominic Sandbrook | |
Birth Date: | 2 October 1974 |
Birth Place: | Bridgnorth, Shropshire, England |
Dominic Christopher Sandbrook, (born 2 October 1974) is a British historian, author, columnist and television presenter.[1] [2] He co-hosts The Rest is History podcast with author Tom Holland.
Sandbrook was born on 2 October 1974 in Bridgnorth, Shropshire, England.[3] [4] He was educated at Malvern College, then an all-boys independent school in Worcestershire.[5] [6] He studied history and French at Balliol College, Oxford. He then studied for a Master of Letters (MLitt) degree in history at the University of St Andrews and a Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degree at Jesus College, Cambridge.[7] [8] His doctoral thesis was titled "The political career of Senator Eugene McCarthy" and was completed in 2002.[9]
Previously a lecturer in history at the University of Sheffield, he has been a senior fellow of the Rothermere American Institute at Oxford University and a member of its history faculty. Sandbrook was a visiting professor at King's College London,[10] and a freelance writer and newspaper columnist. In 2007 he was named one of Waterstone's 25 Authors for the Future. In July 2021, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society (FRHistS).
Sandbrook's first book, a biography of the US presidential candidate Eugene McCarthy, proved controversial on its publication in the United States in 2004. Writing for H-Net, a forum for scholars in the humanities and social sciences, David Stebenne said it "describes McCarthy's life and work with outstanding grace and clarity", and was "a very fine study of a significant figure that serious students of American postwar history will want to consult."[11] McCarthy himself called the book "almost libellous".[12]
In 2005, Sandbrook published Never Had It So Good, a history of Britain from the Suez Crisis to the Beatles, 1956–63. It was described as a "rich treasure chest of a book" by Anthony Howard in The Daily Telegraph, who wrote of his "respect for the sweep and scope of the author's knowledge".[13] Nick Cohen wrote in The Observer that it was "a tribute to Sandbrook's literary skill that his scholarship is never oppressive. Alternately delightful and enlightening, he has produced a book which must have been an enormous labour to write but is a treat to read".[14] [15] Richard Gott was more sparing in his praise: "Sandbrook does his best, but he lacks the literary talent to cover such a wide canvas and keep the reader awake."[16]
The sequel, White Heat, covering the years 1964–70 and the rise and fall of Harold Wilson's Labour government, was published in August 2006. "Sandbrook's book could hardly be more impressive in its scope", wrote Leo McKinstry in The Times. "He writes with authority and an eye for telling detail."[17] In November 2009, it was named by the Telegraph as "one of the books that defined the Noughties".[18] James Buchan observed, "For all the charm of Dominic Sandbrook's book, with its minute anatomy of social forms and brilliant parade of charlatans and fools, it is hard not to feel that somehow time has not been well used."[19] Unlike some historians of the 1960s, Sandbrook argues it was marked by conservatism and conformity. His books attempt to debunk what he sees as myths associated with the period, from the sexual revolution to student protest, and he challenges the "cultural revolution" thesis associated with historians like Arthur Marwick. Charles Shaar Murray, writing in The Independent, called Sandbrook "the Hoodie Historian" and imagined him "slouching into shot while throwing whatever passes for gang signs in the history department of the University of Sheffield, and announcing to Arthur Marwick, Jonathon Green et al. that 'You is all mi bitches nuh.'"[20]
Sandbrook continued the history of postwar Britain with State of Emergency (2010), covering the period 1970–74,[21] and Seasons in the Sun, which took the story up to the election of Margaret Thatcher as prime minister in 1979. A fifth volume, Who Dares Wins, covering the period 1979–1982, was published in October 2019.[22] Anthony Quinn, reviewing for The Observer, described it as a "long, painstaking and pretty enjoyable haul through Britain in the first three years of the Thatcher government ... ungratifyingly even-handed in his portrait of [Thatcher], alive to the flaws in her character and sharp in confounding the popular myths."[23] For The Sunday Times, Piers Brendon said it was "a rich mixture of political narrative and social reportage ... scholarly, accessible, well written, witty and incisive."[24]
Sandbrook has written articles and reviews for the Daily Mail, The Sunday Times, The Sunday Telegraph, The Observer and The Daily Telegraph and has appeared on BBC radio and television. His Radio Four series SlapDash Britain, charting the rise and fall of British governance since the Second World War, was described by the radio critic Miranda Sawyer as "very brilliant".[25]
In February 2011, Michael C. Moynihan identified instances of apparent plagiarism in Sandbrook's book Mad as Hell.[26] Moynihan later expressed amazement that there were few repercussions for Sandbrook's career.[27] He suggested that Sandbrook was shielded from criticism by his social connections, saying: "There is an element of protection. Media buddies who go to the same dinner parties and all the rest of it."[28]
In an interview with Brendan O'Neill, Sandbrook rejected the allegations and maintained that he "footnoted his sources, and if popular history books sometimes sound familiar that is because there are only so many ways to say things."
Year | Title | Broadcaster | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|
2009 | Archive on 4 "The Anniversary Anniversary" | Radio 4 | An examination of people's obsessions with anniversaries[29] | |
2009 | Archive on 4 "Pinter On Air" | Radio 4 | Discussing the role of television and radio dramas in establishing Harold Pinter's reputation | |
2010 | SlapDash Britain | Radio 4 | A 2-part series examining bureaucracy and incompetence in British government since the 1950s[30] | |
2010 | Archive on 4 "A Working-class Tory Is Something To Be" | Radio 4 | With David Davis. An exploration of the history of British working-class Conservatives | |
2011 | Archive on 4 "Mind Your PMQs" | Radio 4 | The history and role of Prime Minister's Questions | |
2011 | The People's Post: A Narrative History of the Post Office | Radio 4 | A 15-part series examining the history of the Royal Mail[31] | |
2012 | Archive on 4 "Tuning in" | Radio 4 | The history of British radio entertainment | |
2012 | The 70s | BBC Two | A 4-part history of Britain during the 1970s[32] | |
2013 | Das Auto: The Germans, Their Cars and Us | BBC Two | The ascendence of the post-war automotive industry in Germany[33] | |
2013 | Strange Days: Cold War Britain | BBC Two | A history of Britain during the Cold War[34] | |
2014 | Learning to Listen | Radio 4 | The development of radio listening habits through the 1920s and 1930s[35] | |
2014 | Tomorrow's Worlds: The Unearthly History of Science Fiction | BBC Two | A 4-part history of science fiction[36] | |
2014 | Archive on 4 "The Eccentric Entrepreneur" | Radio 4 | The life of Captain Leonard Plugge | |
2015 | Let Us Entertain You | BBC Two | A 4-part history of British post-war culture[37] | |
2015 | Archive on 4 "The Future Of The BBC: A History" | Radio 4 | A history of the BBC and how it may need to change to survive | |
2016 | The 80s with Dominic Sandbrook | BBC Two | A 3-part history of Britain during the 1980s[38] | |
2016 | Future Tense - The Story of H.G. Wells | BBC One | Examines how H. G. Wells's lower-middle class upbringing in the suburban counties of South East England influenced his early science fiction writing.[39] |
Since 2020, Sandbrook has co-presented a podcast with historian Tom Holland called The Rest is History.[40]