Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Literature / TheEnglishDragon

Go To

1[[quoteright:319:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/engdrag_6445.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:319:Damn funny-looking dragon.]]
3
4A 2001 novel written by Tim Bragg. A chap named Oliver has his toddler son Ben kidnapped by stoned inner-city teenagers, provoking much mulling over what it means to be English and a culture clash between young and old, urban and rural, cosmopolitan and traditional.
5
6The book was published by Athelney, whose catalogue also includes ''An English Nationalism'', ''The Deculturalisation of the English People'' and ''English Witness to their Darkest Hour''. The outfit is based in England.
7
8Bragg later wrote a sequel, ''Oak'', published by Black Cat Distribution using Lulu.
9----
10!!This book provides examples of:
11* AuthorAvatar: Like Bragg, Oliver is an English nationalist, a musician, and involved with small political parties.
12* AuthorFilibuster:
13** "Our Freedom is being eroded. Those bastards in government are taking it from us stealthily and insidiously. Our culture is being eroded. You can't be English any more. They'll make it illegal. '1984' said it all" says Oliver.
14** More still when Oliver imagines himself as Dante in Hell: "Oliver reserved the first circle for the writers of novels who censored their own work so as not to fall foul of politically correct editors... The second circle would be reserved for the editors and publishers who were scared of anything that wasn't politically correct... In the next circle he put cowardly politicans... In the next circle - always getting tighter and fouler he put the television presenters who voiced only one point of view... Oliver thought about the next circle [and] [p]eopled it with social worker busybodies".
15* BringMyBrownPants: Played straight. Oliver wets himself while panicking about Ben's disappearance.
16* JiveTurkey: "Yoh, pimp, you bin shaggin' the bitch?"
17* PatrioticFervour: Portrayed positively.
18* QuintessentialBritishGentleman: Oliver. Although he'd probably rather be known as an ''English'' gentleman.
19* ShoutOut: The opening paragraph of chapter 14 is a pastiche of Orwell's Literature/NineteenEightyFour; in this version, Winston Smith's job now involves adding ethnic minorities to old films ("Films without cultural and racial diversity had to be re-cast. It was essential - for harmony and peace - to eradicate truth.").
20* StrawmanPolitical: Liberal characters are prone to coming out with comments such as "You're racist because you're White" and "How do you know that you aren't a fascist?". The ignorant youths who kidnap Oliver's son, meanwhile, have dialogue like "St. George - He's someat to do with England...a king or someat" and "Nelson? Didn't he fight the Germans?" - Strawman Apolitical, perhaps.

Top