Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuHistorian David Olusoga charts 180 years of British history as lived by the successive inhabitants of a single home in a British city - from its construction to the present day.Historian David Olusoga charts 180 years of British history as lived by the successive inhabitants of a single home in a British city - from its construction to the present day.Historian David Olusoga charts 180 years of British history as lived by the successive inhabitants of a single home in a British city - from its construction to the present day.
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I was so lucky to be part of this incredible show. I loved finding out about who lived in my house and it was a one in a million experience!
I did not see the first series , but being from Tyneside myself, this was a must watch. I am glad I did watch it, as I found it absolutely fascinating. Tracing the history of one house through the lives of it's residents is a simple idea brilliantly executed.
I cannot recommend this program enough.
When I first came across this I thought it would be like a show I loved from a few years back No. 57 The Story of a House. While this came across as such and I have only been able to see Season 3 as I could not find links for season 1 & 2. This was somewhat trying at times as the presenter tried to convey times past but viewed with the biases of present day that presenter has. I have to say some of his implied speculation and innuendo was very off putting to me. Then one in episode he stated that TB, measles, whooping cough were diseases of the poor classes was horribly inaccurate. These were common diseases of a time before the second World War and vaccination that plagued both the houses of rich as well as poor families. Perhaps he should spend more time on accurate research and not just talking off the top of his poorly educated and very biased head! There was just enough of interest in season 3 for me to rate this at 2 stars, but just barely!
A House Through Time
I must say I was critical of the first series of this show for several reasons, these were:-
1, on occasion, looking at history through a modern day prism, one example was particularly when talking about slavery.
2, pushing liberal authoritarianism when looking at how things were and how the historian thinks they should have been.
3, making a conjecture way beyond the historical facts before us.
With that said, series 2 is a total triumph and I will detail the main advances forward
1, the brilliant use of primary sources, we, the viewer are in on the action.
2, like a great detective we are led by these sources in a haphazard way this is thrilling.
3, the opinions and conclusions have been curbed to perfectly rational suggestions that add and interpret the often fragmentary historical documents.
4, the graphics were enhanced, amazing!
5, it was masterful in episode 3 to allow an emotional relative to take over the show, this was visceral and dry history was brought alive.
6, the casual manner of delivery with the viewer, we were on a journey together not board and chalk.
Now to be picky
1, the interior of the modern house was a bore, and yet this was the star of our show, this needed dressing.
2, inserting the MP was an obvious political point, an agenda that was misjudged here, this was self-indulgent.
3, it was clear the second half of episode 3, with the IRA became rushed, clearly the team was not expecting such rich history, but this didn't do it justice.
David Olusoga has managed to cut the historical cake in a novel and refreshing way, he took this simple idea and ran with it. This programme was without doubt brilliant, as indeed he is, and deeply memorable, it is not as he says an alternative history but a parallel history of everyday folk.
It is clear from the narrative the catch-net of a welfare state is the shining star of our civilisation, lacking still in most places today including America, who say you are "two paychecks from the street".
I must say I was critical of the first series of this show for several reasons, these were:-
1, on occasion, looking at history through a modern day prism, one example was particularly when talking about slavery.
2, pushing liberal authoritarianism when looking at how things were and how the historian thinks they should have been.
3, making a conjecture way beyond the historical facts before us.
With that said, series 2 is a total triumph and I will detail the main advances forward
1, the brilliant use of primary sources, we, the viewer are in on the action.
2, like a great detective we are led by these sources in a haphazard way this is thrilling.
3, the opinions and conclusions have been curbed to perfectly rational suggestions that add and interpret the often fragmentary historical documents.
4, the graphics were enhanced, amazing!
5, it was masterful in episode 3 to allow an emotional relative to take over the show, this was visceral and dry history was brought alive.
6, the casual manner of delivery with the viewer, we were on a journey together not board and chalk.
Now to be picky
1, the interior of the modern house was a bore, and yet this was the star of our show, this needed dressing.
2, inserting the MP was an obvious political point, an agenda that was misjudged here, this was self-indulgent.
3, it was clear the second half of episode 3, with the IRA became rushed, clearly the team was not expecting such rich history, but this didn't do it justice.
David Olusoga has managed to cut the historical cake in a novel and refreshing way, he took this simple idea and ran with it. This programme was without doubt brilliant, as indeed he is, and deeply memorable, it is not as he says an alternative history but a parallel history of everyday folk.
It is clear from the narrative the catch-net of a welfare state is the shining star of our civilisation, lacking still in most places today including America, who say you are "two paychecks from the street".
This show is not about house and how it was built and changes made to it though time. This show seems to try find a house that have some owners with scandals or whose line of work while perfectly honest and acceptable at the time, but would be a career considered unacceptable today. Or who while inventing something that was ground breaking for its' time but proved to hidden dangers later in time. All of this present with the host/presenters prejudices stamped over every episode! He more of a social historian nat a historian of architecture !
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesOn Tuesday, 16th June 2020, BBC Two announced that they have commissioned a four episode fourth series of the history documentary series for 2021. Series four will delve into the history of a house in Leeds.
- VerbindungenFeatured in Harry Hill's World of TV: History Documentaries (2020)
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