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'The Road to Wigan Pier' Revisited
 By Stephen Armstrong‏

Joint Enterprise | 28.02.2011 12:57 | Public sector cuts | Repression | Social Struggles | Sheffield

The Roots Research Centre and Equanomics UK are assisting author Stephen Armstrong in research for a book with a modern day take on the Orwell book about poverty in the UK 'The Road to Wigan Pier' and he would really like to make contact with people in Manchester, Bradford, Sheffield, Liverpool and Wigan.

He's already speaking to Oxfam GB. However he is also is keen to also speak to people, who can put him in touch with people (White, African Caribbean, or Asian) who are living in poverty, unemployed, severely suffering from the cuts and recession etc. He is also keen to speak to other third sector organisations who have UK poverty on their agenda — covering health or race or food or social care or any of the points raised by Orwell. Equanomics is helping with this but it maybe that you could also help?

Here's some info for you:

The Road to Wigan Pier Revisited
 By Stephen Armstrong

On Sunday 25th September 2011, the opening day of the Labour Party Conference, Beautiful Books will publish The Road To Wigan Pier Revisited, by acclaimed journalist and writer Stephen Armstrong.

The book will trace the same journey taken by George Orwell 75 years ago, and will explore the extent to which the issues of poverty and social injustice which Orwell found then still exist today in 2011. From Stephen Armstrong: “Many parts of Orwell’s book could be reproduced word for word describing Britain today — a terrifying idea in a modern first world social democracy. In my book I discover shocking poverty, missing community and a forgotten generation. But also acts of heroism, imagination and optimism the offer hope and faith in a nation of lions lead by donkeys.”

Stephen Armstrong is the author of War plc (Faber, 2009), The Super-Rich Shall Inherit The Earth (Constable, 2010) and The White Island (Black Swan, 2005). Stephen writes for the Sunday Times, Guardian, Daily Telegraph, Elle, Esquire and other publications.

Joint Enterprise