Called the "King of Correspondents" Henry W.
Nevinson (1856-1941) captured the political zeitgeist of the 19th and
early 20th centuries. Covering conflicts across the globe, the British war
correspondent commented on war in Greece,
the Siege of Ladysmith, the aftermath of revolution in Russia in
1905-6 and the tragedy at Gallipoli, helping to shape understanding of world
affairs at the time. He also campaigned for rights in Angola, Ireland
and India.
At home he was a strenuous advocate of women's suffrage. Nevinson was the first
to report sympathetically on Germany's
devastation after the First World War. In the 1920s he accompanied Ramsay MacDonald
on the first visit of a British Prime Minister to an American President.
Although courting the establishment, Nevinson cultivated controversy as a rebel. Yet he remained a highly
admired journalist and was a vivid and acute observer who wrote exquisite
prose. Drawing on Nevinson's private diaries which span nearly 50 years, Angela
V. John captures, for the first time, the story of a figure whose perspectives
whether on the Balkans, the Caucasus, the Middle East or the United States,
illuminate many of the conflicts which resonate in today's uncertain world.
Angela V. John is Honorary Professor of History at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth. For many years she
was Professor of History at the University
of Greenwich in London. She has published extensively on
women's employment in nineteenth and early twentieth century Britain and was
one of the founders of the International Journal Gender & History. Her
previous books include a biography of the American-born actress, novelist and suffragette
Elizabeth Robins.