Showing posts sorted by relevance for query suffolk. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query suffolk. Sort by date Show all posts

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

July global round up

This month, rave shut down in England, religious police raid club in Malaysia, and Iceland's first Reclaim the Streets party.

Suffolk, England: Five arrested as police shut down rave ( Evening Star, 16 July 2007)
'Suffolk police today put ravegoers on notice that illegal parties would be shut down this summer.The warning came after scores of officers from across East Anglia were drafted in to break up a rave in a Suffolk forest. More than 70 officers were involved in the operation to stop the party at Ingham, near Bury St Edmunds, and five people were arrested on suspicion of organising the event. Police chiefs leading three units of officers - one each from Suffolk, Essex and Norfolk - said there had been few problems and the rave of up to 1,000 revellers had been stopped relatively peacefully thanks to the number of officers brought in.

The major operation, in which officers also seized sound equipment, follows two similar raves in recent months - one at Parham Airfield and the other at Euston, near Thetford - which both erupted in violence towards the police. Supt Alan Caton stressed illegal raves on privately owned land would not be tolerated in Suffolk. He said: “This is the start of summer and our message is clear. We have a duty to ensure where possible that rural places are not subjected to the noise and disruption that these parties cause. Where evidence is found to identify the people responsible we will do everything we can to bring them to justice.”

A police spokeswoman said officers were called to the rave on Forestry Commission land in the early hours of yesterday: “Our aim was to take swift action to disperse revellers, arrest organisers, seize equipment, minimise damage to land and prevent disturbance to local people.” The illegal party was still going on at lunchtime and ravers leaving the forest clearing insisted they were doing no harm. One, from near Newmarket, said: “It's not upsetting anyone - there are no houses around here. It's just young people having good time"... Tim Root, who lives in the village, said he only heard the rave as he walked his dog and could see nothing wrong as long as the parties were kept out of the way and the revellers left no damage or litter behind.

Malaysia: Nightclub Singer Facing Prosecution (The Star, 16 July 2007)

'The Perak Religious Department (JAIP) will decide on Aug 6 whether to charge nightclub singer Siti Noor Idayu Abd Moin for dressing sexily and “encouraging vice” by performing at a club. JAIP director Datuk Jamry Sury said he would wait for a recommendation from his enforcement personnel after they meet the 22-year-old at the department here on that day. On July 3, the department detained Siti Noor Idayu and several others during a raid at a nightclub in Tambun here.

In a move that drew criticism from non-government organisations, Siti Noor Idayu was ordered to explain why she had “exposed her body” and “encouraged immoral activities” by working at the outlet. However, Siti Noor Idayu had said she was not even drinking and wore a white sleeveless top and long pants when JAIP officers raided the nightclub' (picture of singer in offending outfit).

Iceland: Reclaim the Streets (Indymedia, 14 July 2007)

'REYKJAVIK, July 14th - Today, Bastille-day, around a hundred people raved all over Reykjavik's ring road in a carnaval against heavy industry. Iceland's first Reclaim the Streets began cheerfully as Saving Iceland ran down Perlan and onto Reykjavik's western ring. A clown army danced to the beats down into the city centre. This Rave Against the Machine was organized by Saving Iceland to "reclaim our public space, space to be free to dance, to be free from dreary industrial car culture and to voice a sound of festival in opposition to the grim industrialisation plans for Iceland," says a Saving Iceland activist.

When the crowd descended Snorrabraut on it's way to Laugavegur, the main shopping street, police blockaded the road and there was a standoff for an hour and a half. When the driver of the sound system tried to exit the vehicle, police attempted to arrest him, violently attacking bystanders. A number of people got injured and four arrested. Police went for people's throats, knocked people face down on the ground, leg-cuffed people and smashed a car window. Activists stayed non-violent. The crowd moved on to the police station down the road, and sympathizers welcomed us with a surprise second sound system'.

Video of party here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NenbTc0cQs4

Saturday, March 03, 2007

Parties raided on three continents

1. Cambridgeshire, England

"Police officers were attacked with fire extinguishers as they tried to break up an illegal rave at a disused factory on the edge of Warboys. Nine people were arrested and another was taken to hospital and later released after an eight-hour illegal rave took place overnight on Saturday and Sunday. Police from Cambridgeshire, Bedfordshire and Suffolk were called to break up the rave, which had attracted about 300 people but, when they arrived at about 12.30am on Sunday, fire extinguishers were sprayed and thrown at the officers... Police also seized several thousand pounds worth of music equipment and a number of vehicles. "

Source: Hunts Post, 21 February 2007

2. Suffolk County, New York, USA

"Suffolk County Police arrested 11 people following an investigation at a rave party in Copiague. Officers began investigating the party at the Third Rail Lounge last Saturday, and found that liquor was being sold without a license"

Source: Empire State News, 20 February 2007

3. Sydney, Australia

"A large dance party near Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens was shut down yesterday and 26 revellers were arrested following a police crackdown on illicit drugs. Officers with drug detection dogs raided the harbourside Azure V party at Fleet Steps... The dance party's website, run by iRIS Group Productions, said more than 5000 people - including some of "Sydney's [and the world's] most buffed and beautiful" - were expected to attend the eight-hour gay and lesbian event. But the party was shut down at 9pm following the raid, which police said was part of a operation targeting drug use and supply in The Rocks Local Area Command.... Another reveller, who did not provide his name, questioned the police's motives in shutting down the party. "As a patron of last night's Azure harbour party, I find it hard to believe the NSW Police shut down the party for the concern and health of the people at the party... they ejected 5000 people out of what was a medically supervised and policed event onto the streets to fend for themselves."

Source: Sydney Morning Herald, 26 February 2007; photo of pre-raid party by 8lettersUK

Friday, November 13, 2009

Autumn Free Parties in England

'No arrests made as police shut down rave at rural site'
(Northampton Chronicle & Echo 13 October 2009)

'An illegal rave was shut down by police in Northamptonshire, who surrounded the encampment and trapped partygoers inside. A call was made to the force during the early hours of Sunday, following complaints about the rave near Horton. A spokeswoman for Northamptonshire Police said that when officers arrived they found "a large number" of revellers hosting the illegal party at a rural site in Yardley Chase. She added: "There were approximately 40 vehicles found on arrival. Officers sealed off all the entrants to the site and did not allow anyone to leave. Those who had already left and were attempting to return were denied entry. No arrests were made at the scene." The police helicopter was also called to the scene, shortly before 1.30am on Sunday'.

'Illegal rave in North Petherton'
(This is Somerset, 15 October 2009)

'An illegal rave in North Petherton was shut down by police within hours of starting on Saturday night. Swift action by the Avon and Somerset Constabulary ensured illegal ravers were stopped when reports were received of around 200 people blasting loud music in Kings Cliff Woods off Cliff Road at 11.30pm. Officers raced to the scene and found around 50 cars parked up. The North Gate entrance to the woods was open and the lock had been broken. The operation to close down the music and empty the site of the would-be revellers was completed by 2.30am without any problems. Safer Stronger Neighbourhoods beat manager PC Richard Tully said: "Our prompt action in tackling this illegal rave hopefully sends out a strong and powerful message to would-be organisers that we will not tolerate this kind of illegal activity and we will respond swiftly to concerns of local people.

'Up to 3,000 people took part in an illegal rave'
(Telegraph, 1 November 2009)

'Up to 3,000 people took part in an illegal rave in an old factory, according to Nadine Dorries, the Tory MP. The Mid Bedfordshire MP said the youths were playing loud music and taking ecstasy all night, while they had no access to water at the Wavendon Heath site in Bedfordshire.
"We have 3,000 kids taking ecstasy with no water and a kid could die any moment. They're still arriving in droves and there's no safety here at all, there are no toilets, there are no facilities for them", she said. "There's no safety here at all, there are no toilets, there are no facilities for them." She criticised the police for failing to act decisively.

The rave is believed to have started at about 3am on Sunday and was eventually stopped by police in the afternoon. Police later estimated that the number of ravers was between 200 and 450. A spokesman said: "We had some intelligence to suggest that a rave was planned in the vicinity of Milton Keynes/Woburn but information was too vague for us to act initially. At the point where we became aware of the location of the rave, at about 0200 GMT, it was under way with above 200 people present. Given the danger of trying to move people, some in an intoxicated state, near to a quarry in the dark and wet, it was decided it was safer not to attempt to move them but to monitor the situation." She added that there had only been three noise complaints up until 6 am'.

'Stark warning to rave organisers'
(Beccles and Bungay Journal, 30 October 2009)

'Norfolk and Suffolk police have issued a stark warning to anyone planning to organise an illegal rave in the county this weekend.There is a zero tolerance approach to such events, which are unsafe and disruptive to our local communities. They will be working closely with colleagues in Suffolk and will share information and provide additional police units to specifically target rave-goers or anyone suspected of involvement in the organisation of a rave across the two counties.

Chief superintendent Tony Cherington said: “I want to make it quite clear that we will use all necessary resources to prevent, disrupt and close down illegal raves in this county. We have issued this warning as we approach the Halloween weekend. “We will continue to take a hard line against them and seek to prosecute and seize and destroy the equipment of anyone found to be involved in their organisation. We will be putting on a significant police presence this weekend to achieve our aims.” Following the successful disruption of previous unlicensed music events, Norfolk Constabulary has again made arrangements with surrounding forces to share resources to disrupt or stop any such events.Last weekend, following a rave in the Feltwell area, over 150 vehicles were stopped and a number of arrests were made for vehicle offences and drink driving. A large quantity of sound equipment, amplifiers and music was also seized.Members of the public are also being urged to play their part and support police action by remaining vigilant over the coming days and by reporting any suspicious activity which may lead them to believe a rave is being organised...'

Monday, September 06, 2010

Summer Free Parties

Summer's almost gone, so guess the free party people will be moving back indoors soon. Here's news of a few outdoor gatherings last month:

Police close down illegal raves in Suffolk (BBC, 22 August 2010)

'Two illegal raves in Suffolk have been closed down and sound equipment seized by police.
Police said about 100 people waiting near Corton beach complied when they were asked to leave on Saturday night. Two generators were seized.

Officers were then alerted to loud music in a field in Culford, near Bury St Edmunds, in the early hours. People at the rave were compliant with police and the site was cleared and cleaned by 1100 BST, police said'.

Up to 1,000 attend illegal rave in Wiltshire forest (BBC, 29 August 2010)

'Between 500 and 1,000 people are estimated to have attended an illegal rave overnight in Wiltshire. Police are working to disperse the last of the party-goers from Savernake Forest, in Stitchcombe, near Marlborough. Officers said they received a tip-off about the rave on Saturday night, but did not know the location at that time.

Dozens of cars were abandoned on roads leading to the village and the noise could be heard from several miles away. Wiltshire Police said they had received two complaints, but there were no reports of any damage. Karen Gardner, who lives in the area, said she was first woken up by the noise at 0400 BST.

"You almost feel this thudding," she said. "I was a bit concerned what might be going on in the little wood behind us, but couldn't establish where it was coming from. If it was coming from Savernake Forest there are quite a lot of woods to go through so goodness knows how loud it was over there."

A rave attended by 800 people was also held in the forest in 2003 and a similar event was thwarted by police in 2005'.

Police vow to come down hard on ravers using Trent Park (North London Today, 25 August 2010)

'Police are to start patrolling Trent Park after hundreds of youths gathered for a series of illegal all-night raves. For the past month, ravers have managed to avoid arrest on the picturesque park off Cockfosters Road, Cockfosters, by feeding false leads to police. Police officers have warned the organisers not to hold any more raves, but so far no arrests have been made and parks police have now been called in to patrol the park and prevent ravers from getting in on Friday and Saturday nights.

In order to avoid being hunted down, savvy rave-goers steer clear of posting information about the raves on the internet – even castigating fellow ravers for posting party pictures after the event. News of the events is being spread through text messages instead. The Trent Park decision follows news that officers across the country are being called in to shut down raves held in fields and parks.

Cabinet member for the environment Chris Bond said: “Zero tolerance will be shown to anyone setting up illegal parties in Trent Park. Any ravers who fail to leave will be arrested on the spot and the organisers may well lose their equipment. We are not prepared to allow our residents’ quality of life to be spoilt by a small band of mindless, selfish idiots. Trent Park is one of the most beautiful parks in London. We won’t stand by and watch it being abused.”

A police spokeswoman said: “We rely on intelligence to find out when these raves are taking place but they do not always happen at the times and locations we have been given. We’ve initiated two operations in recent weeks and will continue to monitor and react to intelligence. While no arrests have yet been made, we do have powers under the Criminal Justice And Public Order Act to seize equipment being used and also prevent people from attending. We can arrest those who refuse to leave when requested by police to do so, but we have not had to resort to these powers so far....'

Thursday, August 02, 2007

East Anglian Crackdown

Police in East Anglia seem to be continuing with their crackdown on free parties. A couple of weeks ago, 70 baton-wielding riot cops from Suffolk, Norfolk and Essex were sent to stop a party in King's Forest, Ingham (near Bury St Edmunds). 5 people were arrested as lines of police with riot shields closed in from both sides of the crowd.

An 18-year-old told the East Anglian Daily Times, (17 July 2007): “The rave was totally peaceful. We deliberately chose a location which was out of the way and far away from anyone. If the riot police had left us to it, everything would have been fine. Many people were terrified and left with bruises while I know one person who suffered a suspected broken hand as he protected his girlfriend. We just want to go to a party with no fear of violence in a peaceful setting where you can sit in the woods with friends and listen to your favourite music. This won't deter people, in fact it will bring people closer together and make our beliefs even stronger.”
The Suffolk Evening Star (17 July 2007) also quoted a party goer: “A friend of mine was assaulted as he was trying to run away from police. He has a suspected broken hand but when he asked for the officer's number he just laughed at him and said '118 118'. Other officers covered their number badges up so you couldn't see them. They carried out several charges and started beating people up with batons until we were forced to leave".

Sunday, May 18, 2025

For Peace! exhibition at Four Corners


'For Peace!' is an interesting exhibition at Four Corners gallery in Bethnal Green, based around material from the archive at MayDay Rooms. The focus is very much on the more radical end of peace and anti-militarist movements - not simply calling for an absence of conflict but challenging the existence of the military and the state's weapons of mass destruction which tick along beneath the radar of mainstream political discourse. Was anybody ever asked for instance whether we wanted a continuing massive US military base at Lakenheath in Suffolk? 

From this perspective the efforts of the Greenham Common and Faslane peace camps set up in the 1980s are seen as central, installing themselves at what is perhaps the real heart of the state - less  Whitehall than the fenced off compounds behind which it accumulates its missiles.

Abolish War! - Greenham common women's peace camp

The Faslane peace camp was set up in 1982 at the Royal Naval base in Scotland that is home to Britain's nuclear weapons-armed submarines

There is archive material from the direct action end of the 1950s/60s movement against the bomb (Committee of 100 and Spies for Peace) and from some less well known 1980s/90s activists such as those who opposed the 'nuclear colonialism' of testing sites and weapons bases.

'The peasants are revolting Ma'am' - a group of women protestors described in the Sun as a '15-strong feminist brigade' climbed over the wall into Buckingham Palace grounds in 1993 in solidarity with the Western Shoshone people whose land in the Nevada Desert was used as a testing ground for American and British nuclear weapons.

'Women working for a nuclear-free and independent Pacific' - a 1980s benefit at the Old White Horse in Brixton (later Brixton Jamm). The Rongelap survivors were those still living with the radioactive aftermath of the 1950s H Bomb tests in the Pacific.

There is also an emphasis     on solidarity movements such as the Troops Out Movement who campaigned for British withdrawal from Ireland from the 1970s to the 1990s

1980s Southwark Troops Out Movement meeting -  SNOW venue refers to 'Squatters Network of Walworth'

Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament against Trident missiles and a flyer for the 1983 'Festival for the Future' in Bristol

Friday, September 30, 2011

Police and parties, 1994-95

A while ago I posted chronologies of police and parties from 1996 and 1997. Here's some more from 1994 and 1995, all from England unless otherwise stated.

1994

January

( N.Ireland): A member of the Royal Ulster Constabulary is acquitted of the murder of 19 year-old Kevin McGovern in 1991, and will now return to police duty. McGovern was shot in the back on his way to a disco in Cookstown. The policeman claimed he thought the youth was armed (he wasn't). A few weeks earlier (on December 23) two British soldiers were found not guilty of the murder of Fergal Carraher, an unarmed man who was shot dead at an army checkpoint in Cullhana in 1990.

March

(N.Ireland): 16 people are arrested and many injured as RUC police with riot gear and dogs attack young people leaving a dance in Omagh. As the dance finished, police sealed off surrounding streets. People are beaten about the head with three foot long batons and plastic bullets fired.

April

Richard O’Brien, a 37 year old father of seven is killed by police from Walworth police station in south London. He had been to a dance at an Irish centre after a christening; outside he got into an argument with cops who held him down on the ground for 5 minutes after handcuffing him. In 1995 an inquest jury found that he had been unlawfully killed.

November

100 police raid Riverside club in Newcastle, making 33 arrests

December

Police raid on Final Frontier, techno night at Club UK, Wandsworth, South London

1995

May

Police with riot shields raid a techno free party at the ArtLab, Preston and impound the sound system, decks, records and other equipment. 21 arrests [Mixmag July 1995]

(Scotland): Drug squad cops harrass people at Ingnition II, a commercial rave in Aberdeen. 75 people were searched (some of them up to four times in a half hour period), and some arrested.

3000 people attend an all-weekend free party organised by United Systems at a disused air force base near Woodbridge, Suffolk featuring Virus, Vox Populi, Jiba, Oops and Chiba City sound systems. Police shut down the party on Monday afternoon, arresting four people and confiscating equipment (all returned within two weeks).

Police close down free party put on by Transient and Babel sound systems near Bangor (Wales).

Heavy police presence at Phenomenon One at the Hacienda, Manchester. Although there was no trouble, the police complained that there were too many people smoking grass and drinking after 2 am, and the management cancelled future jungle nights.

June

Police raid Home in Manchester, and call for it to be closed down permanently. It doesn’t reopen until December.

July

The weekend of July 7th 1995 saw the first major police operation using the ‘anti-rave’ sections of the Criminal Justice Act. Cops across the country coordinated their efforts and successfully managed to prevent the planned 7/7 “mother” of all free festivals. To stop people dancing in a field, police:

- raided the houses of people believed to be involved in organising the party and charged eight people with “conspiracy to cause a public nuisance”;
- took over the party info phonelines and questioned callers;
- used helicopters and set up roadblocks to stop people getting to planned festival sites at Corby (Northants), Sleaford (Lincs.), and Smeatharpe (Devon) where ten people were arrested.
- seized the sound system belonging to Black Moon (a free party collective based at Buxton, Derbyshire), charging three people under Section 63 of the CJA, the first time it has been used.
- used Section 60 of the CJA to set up five mile exclusion zones around festival sites.

Thousands of people took to the roads in search of the festival, and despite the efforts of the police several smaller parties did happen, including at Grafham (where over 1000 people partied) and at Steart Beach near Hinckley Point in Dorset where 150 vehicles managed to gather.

Bottles and bricks thrown at police by people being turned away from a warehouse near Huddersfield, Yorkshire where a party was to be held. 3 people are arrested after shop and police car windows are smashed.

70 police raid Progress house night in Derby. Everybody in the club (punters, staff and security) searched and made to leave, and the club was closed down

On July 23rd 1995 Reclaim the Streets closed down one of London’s busiest roads and held a big free party. Publicity for ‘Rave against the machine’ had been circulating for weeks with only the venue a secret. While police wondered where the action would be hundreds of people poured out of Angel tube station and blocked Islington high street, transforming it quickly into a car free zone. Banners calling for an end to the “tyranny of the motor car” and “support the railworkers” (on strike) were hung across the road, and sound systems, including one fitted onto an armoured car, sprang into action. Chill out spaces were created with bits of carpet on the road and a few comfy armchairs, as well as a giant sandpit for children. A couple of thousand people partied from noon to about seven o’clock while the police watched on unamused. After the music finished and most people had gone home, riot cops took out their frustration on those left behind, baton charging them down to Kings Cross, and making 38 arrests

(Scotland): “The friendly ‘boys on blue’ or rather ‘psycho cops in combat gear’ launched a massive, over-the-top drugs raid on the Kathouse club in Lockerbie. About 50 of them burst in, handcuffed everyone and carted them off to Lockerbie and Dumfries police station. Everyone was interrogated, finger prints were taken and they had to mark on a plan of the Kathouse where they had been sitting and they were all strip searched. The police treated everyone like shit. The Kathouse holds about 150 people max. It’s in a small town and the club itself is not very big. .. The music ranged from house to hardcore, the atmosphere was electric, there was never any violence... 6 people out of 77 were charged with possession of drugs” [M8, October 1995.]

August

(Canada): In Shuswap territory, a sacred sundance and burial site was been occupied by Native Americans. At the end of August 1995, heavily armed Royal Canadian Mounted Police cut off all communications to the Shuswap camp, and surround the area. One Canadian cop refered to the sundancers as “dancing prairie niggers”. [Earth First Action Update, September 1995]

(Argentina): Police arrest 130 gay men and transvestites after storming the gay pub Gas Oil in Buenos Aires on suspicion of ‘corruption’. In Mar del Plata, 60 lesbians and gay men were stripped searched and arrested in the Petroleo disco [Pink Paper, 1 September 1995]

September

(Iran): “A bride has been sentenced to 85 lashes in Mashhad, Iran, for dancing with men at her wedding. The court sentenced 127 wedding guests to floggings or fines and jailed one man.” [Guardian, 5 September 1995]

(Ireland): Tribal Gathering II, due to take place in Cavan on September 30th, is cancelled after the local police object. A local cop says that they did not have the resources to stop “the undesirable elements that shows of this nature attract”. Cavan County Council had initially approved the event, but after the intervention of the Garda they moved the goalposts and said that the organisers (Universe and The Mean Fiddler) would need planning permission, impossible in the time remaining.

Over 114 arrests (mainly for drugs) at Dreamscape, a commercial rave at Brafield Aeordorome, Northampton.

35 people arrested in police raid on party at Clyro near Hay-on-Wye on the Welsh border.

October

150 police raid Club UK in south London. Operation Blade involved dogs, horses, and the Territorial Support Group. 800 clubbers were turned out on to the streets, and many searched. 10 people were arrested

(Wales): Police raid 37 pubs and clubs in mid-Wales, making 50 arrests after seizing various drugs

11 people are nicked in a a drugs raid on Happy Jax in south-east London.

On Saturday October 21st 1995, 600 people block Deansgate, one of Manchester’s busiest shopping streets for a Reclaim the Streets protest. People dance and party until 5:00 pm, when the police threaten to arrest the Desert Storm Sound System (veterans of Hyde Park and Bosnia). The crowd move to Albert Square (outside the Town Hall) where they carry on till the morning.

November

(Scotland): 30 police raid Slam at the Arches in Glasgow.

150 police wait outside Dance Paradise event in Great Yarmouth searching people and making 86 arrests ; the rave was spread over three venues and the police stopped and searched people as they moved between them. The police invited BBC and ITV crews to film the operation [Mixmag, January 1996]

Manager of the Mineshaft gay club in Manchester convicted under the Disorderly Houses Act 1751 for supposedly allowing men to have sex with men in a back-room at the club (raided by police in April 1994 with 13 arrests).

The owner of Peckham gay bar Attitude fined under an 1832 Act for “allowing disorderly behaviour”. Undercover cops in leather visited the club earlier this year, as did two Southwark Council Licensing officers. The latter attended an underwear party and stripped down in the spirit of things before reporting that they had seen men having oral sex and four men dancing, when the bar had no dancing licence [Gay Gazette 8 November 1995]

The House of Lords refuses to repeal the Sunday Observance Act of 1780 which forbids pubs and clubs from charging for dances on the Sabbath. While horse racing and shopping have been allowed, the Lords ruled Sunday dances too sensitive and needing more public consultation. The Metropolitan Police have written to pubs warning them that they could be fined for breaking these rules. Since New Years Eve falls on a Sunday some events (such as a Sign of the Times party at the ICA) have already been cancelled. The law also requires special licences to extend music, dancing and drinking hours on a Sunday [Time Out, November 1995, Gay Gazette, 8 Nov. 1995]

December

Police raid the Dolphin gay pub in Wakefield at 2:30 am on Boxing Day and arrest 15 people because “Licensing laws were being broken”

Seven people become the first to be found guilty under the “rave” sections of the Criminal Justice Act, after being arrested at a party on the site of an anti-roads protest in Whitstable, Kent

(Australia) 20,000 people from all over the world turn up for the Bondi beach party in Sydney on Christmas Day. Police threaten to ban next year’s party, or at least make it alcohol-free after rioting at the end. On New Year’s Eve, there is more trouble: 12 people were arrested and rocks and bottles were thrown at cops.

Monday, May 10, 2010

London clubbers 1976 and 2010

Photographer Chris Steele-Perkins has a new book out, England my England, featuring 40 years of his documentary photography, with an exhibition to match at Northumbria University Gallery, Sandyford Road, Newcastle-upon-Tyne until 4th June. I haven't seen it, but will definitely try and check it out when it comes to London, opening at Kings Place, 90 York Way, London N1 9AG from 18th June to 30th July. Among the photographs I've seen are some really strong dance images. This one is of dancers at the Lyceum Ballroom in London 1976 (note the guy in the background in DMs):


ⓒ Chris Steele-PerkinsChris has previously published a collection on Teds and was present at the Lewisham 1977 anti-National Front protests.

Meanwhile Georgina Cook is continuing to do what she does best, documenting club scenes and other things she comes across in her wanderings from Croydon to Paris. I particularly like this one, taken at the Londinium warehouse rave on May Day at the Ewer Street car park on Great Suffolk Street, London SE1. It gives a real sense of that feeling of wandering through railway arches at a club. Lots more of her stuff at her Drumz of the South blog and flickr


ⓒ Georgina Cook

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Latitude 2009

I spent last weekend at the Latitude festival, near Southwold in Suffolk. Musical highlights included Emmy the Great's sweet songs about (near?) unplanned pregnancy and fatal car crashes, dancing to Camera Obscura's Hey Lloyd I'm ready to be heartbroken, an answer song twenty years after Lloyd Cole first posed the question; and most especially The Pet Shop Boys.


Their's was an all singing, dancing , costume changing performance - complete with Gilbert and George style background movies, acrobatics and construction workers moving the set around. At one point Neil Tennant left the stage in a dinner jacket after a few subdued ballads like Jealousy then marched back out in a crown and robe for a mash up of Domino Dancing and a Hi-NRG cover of Coldplay's Viva La Vida, all followed up with encores of West End Girls and Being Boring (which always make me cry). Certainly made a change from watching blokes with guitars.

I also took in Ladyhawke, Regina Spektor, Lykke Li, Pretenders, White Lies, Airborne Toxic Event, Doves, Patrick Wolf, Squeeze, Little Boots and Mika - to say I actually saw all of these would be an exaggeration, the last three were in crowded marquees where listening from the edge was as close as we could get. There would have been some more but we got fed up of the rain on the third day and left early.

Latitude has a wider arts festival shtick, with film and literature as well as music but I didn't have time for too much of that. There were also fairy tale movies in the woods, ballet dancers by the lake...


...the Disco Shed (basically decks in a shed, people dancing outside)...


... and everywhere the english summer sunshine and showers outfit of shorts and wellies, with occasional fancy dress flourishes (a group of blue painted smurfs wandering through the crowd for instance). Oh and the inevitable Michael Jackson memorial in the woods.

Monday, July 27, 2009

The commercial festival boom

Some reflections after my trip last weekend to Latitude festival...

25 years ago the British state mounted a huge and brutal police operation to clamp down on the Stonehenge Free Festival. 15 years ago it passed legislation designed to outlaw autonomous dance music festivals in the aftermath of Castlemorton.

The point was never to crush festivals entirely, but rather to make sure that they could only take place when approved, regulated and controlled by the state. Nevertheless it did feel as if the fact of thousands of people gathering together for days on end for music and dancing was something that was fundamentally alien to the ruling culture, at least to the cultural life of the ruling Conservative government.

Even officially sanctioned festivals retained some kind of oppositional edge under the Tories. Glastonbury in the 1980s mainly raised funds for the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament. Lesbian and Gay Pride, which attracted huge numbers to free festivals in London parks, was already being criticised by some queer activists for apolitical hedonism, but this was an era when there was still an unequal age of consent and the government was passing its absurd anti-gay Clause 28. You certainly couldn't imagine government ministers approving, let alone attending either of them.

In the past few years, summer music festivals have become a huge phenomenon in the UK with seemingly countless weekend gatherings for all kinds of music taste. Hundreds of thousands of people must spend at least a couple of nights camping out at a festival. If you add in people who attend non camping festivals such as Notting Hill Carnival you are talking about millions of people every year.

So in a cultural sense the 80s/90s festival crowd has conquered. And indeed its the post-punk/raving generations who are now taking their kids to the more family friendly festivals like Latitude.

Equally of course, the festival scene has been conquered by commerce and administration. Many of the festivals are big business concerns with corporate sponsorship. The biggest player is Festival Republic Ltd which now runs Latitude, Reading and Leeds festivals, as well as being contracted to manage Glastonbury. This started out as Vince Power's Mean Fiddler Group, which grew from running London's The Mean Fiddler music venue in the early 1980s to putting on the Irish-themed Fleadh festivals in London before expanding ceaselessly to run 27 venues and many festivals. Vince Power sold up to in 2005, with Live Nation - a California-based multinational music events company - now the major sharefolder in the renamed Festival Republic.

Festivals have inevitably become more middle class as high entrance fees at most festivals prohibit the attendance of the kind of people who were the backbone of the earlier festival scene. In the 1980s at Glastonbury for instance there was a tacit understanding that thousands of people who couldn't afford tickets would be able to sneak into the site for free, now most festivals are surrounded by high fences and heavy security.

If Thatcher's government denounced festival goers as Medieval Brigands and passed homophobic laws, today's politicians feel festivals are safe enough territory. At Latitude there was several Labour politicians present (notably Ed Miliband, Minister for Climate Change) while the Prime Minister's wife was at LGBT Pride this year.

Despite all the commercialization and regulation of state approved festivals there are obviously worse ways of spending a summer weekend than staying out surrounded by music. But whether the desire for some kind of carnivalesque-lite collective experience has any kind of wider political significance at all I'm not so sure. Does the road to realizing human species being pass through a marquee in a field in Suffolk? Maybe not, but I am sure that in some policy think tank even now, somebody is sweating over how to assemble some kind of Gramscian popular historic bloc that can appeal to the festival public alongside more familiar political demographics like White Van Man and Ford Mondeo Man.

See also: If it's called a festival, is it one?

Monday, November 30, 2009

Yet more free party news

Electronic Farm celebrates the 20th anniversary of DIY Sound System, free party pioneers originally based in Nottingham. Nice interview, recalling among other things their role in the movement against the Criminal Justice Bill/Act: 'We ran a series of fundraisers in Nottingham - 'All Systems Go!' in conjunction with Smokescreen, Desert Storm, Breeze and Babble sound systems - we raised about 5 grand a time, which we spent on publicity and information - we did our best to oppose the CJB but they weren't going to let that one be stopped'.

Meanwhile out in the fields and warehouses, the party people struggle continues....

Suspected rave organisers bailed, BBC, 23 November 2009
Four men arrested on suspicion of being involved in the organisation of an illegal rave in Suffolk have been bailed by police. Officers were pelted with missiles when they tried to break up the event at a disused warehouse in Homefield Road, Haverhill, on Saturday night. More than 200 people were at the warehouse, which was cleared by 0720 GMT. Three men from Hertfordshire and one of no fixed address have been released on bail until January. A notice to close down the event was served at 0140 GMT and officers contained the area, which was cleared by 0720 GMT.

Swoop on Middleton barn rave Lynn News, 24 November
Police successfully disrupted an unlicensed rave in a barn at Middleton in the early hours of Saturday morning. Two men were arrested and music equipment seized when officers swooped on the barn shortly after midnight on Friday. A Norfolk Police spokesman said they found about 50 people and up to 15 cars at the event."Our priority is the safety of the public at all times. We acted swiftly to close down this event and continue to work closely with the landowner as we attempt to finalise the investigation," he added.

Two taken to hospital and one arrest at huge illegal rave, Northampton Chronicle & Echo, 16 November 2009
Two revellers were taken to hospital and one man was arrested on drugs offences at a huge illegal rave in Northamptonshire. The underground party took place in a barn in Bugbrooke Road, between Kislingbury and Bugbrooke, on Saturday night and police have confirmed an investigation is now under way following reports of criminal damage.

A spokesman for Northamptonshire Police said because of the number of people who attended, officers decided against breaking up the gathering and instead contained it all evening and into the morning. He said: "Police have contained an illegal rave which took place in a barn on farmland between the villages of Kislingbury and Bugbrooke. "By the time poilce arrived a large number of people had arrived and vehicles had been parked along the side of the road betweeen the two villages. "The venue itself was some way away from residential areas and noise disruption was minimal. " In light of the location and large number of people police took the decision to monitor and contain the eventand contain the event. "One arrest was made, a man from Essex on suspicion of drugs offences."

Thursday, November 18, 2010

1995: Police close down Bank Holiday Raves

Going to be doing some posts about the anti-rave Criminal Justice Act and the 1990s free party scene. 15 years ago the Act had become law and people were waiting to see how it would pan out. As we now know, with years of partying since, the CJA did not manage to stop free parties let alone shut down dance music, but it certainly made things harder. The following article was published in Squall, a magazine from the time that covered squatting, festivals etc.

'Police Shut-Down Free Parties (Squall, Summer 1995)

Police shut down two Bank Holiday raves at the beginning of May, without resorting to the Criminal Justice Act.

Attracting more than 3,000 people over the VE day Bank Holiday weekend, one of the raves featured sound systems Virus, Vox Populai, Jiba, Oops and Cheeba City. United Systems (US) organised the party at a disused RAF base near Woodbridge in Suffolk. Jim, a spokesperson from US, was at the event when police arrived: “I heard one of the poiice officers say, ‘We’re sorry we’ve got to do this but we’ve got orders from above’. The previous night they’d come on site to ask us to turn the noise down and we adhered to that and struck a deal where they were going to leave us alone and we agreed we’d pack up Monday evening. We were miles from anywhere and weren’t in anyone’s way at all. But at two ‘o clock on Monday afternoon they arrived on site to shut us down.”

The police confiscated tens of thousands of pounds worth of equipment from all the sound systems present including Cheeba City’s 6K rig and their vehicles. However, as the CJA can only be used at night, the officers on site had to satisfy themselves with Public Order legislation to enforce the shutdown. Arguments between officers and several of the organisers ensued and four arrests were made.

US contacted Peter Silver, the solicitor who successfully defended the 23 people arrested at Castlemorton Common in 1992. Within two weeks all confiscated equipment had been returned

An event happening near Bangor the same weekend, featuring sound systems Transient and Babel, suffered exactly the same fate. Again in the middle of nowhere, the event was attended by up to 1,000 people over the weekend. Just after midday on Monday officers arrived to close the party down. Again organisers allege that the pollee said they were happy for the event to go ahead but they’d had orders from above. No arrests were made at the Bangor gig and although sound equipment was confiscated it was returned shortly afterwards.

A growing number of people on the free-party scene do not view these events as coincidental. There is a belief that, even where no public nuisance has occurred, local police officers are coming under increased pressure from the Home Office to eradicate unauthorised events'.

Thursday, May 31, 2007

Raging Ravers

Our latest policing round-up features the oldest rave prosecution we have found to date...

England: '63-year-old faces ASBO rave ban' (EDP 24, 26 May 2007)

'A 63-year-old man was made the subject of an interim anti-social behaviour order (ASBO) by Yarmouth magistrates yesterday preventing him from either organising or participating in illegal raves.The joint application against Christopher Farrow, of Hitchin, was made by North Norfolk District Council and Norfolk police.The application came in the wake of a rave that took place at Horsey Gap, owned by the National Trust, over the weekend of May 5-7 involving about 1,000 people'.

England: 'Raging Ravers trash cop car' (Sun, 14 May 2007)

'Rampaging partygoers at an illegal rave are being hunted by cops after a police car was “trashed” on an aristocrat's land. The car was attacked on land owned by Conservative peer Lord Marlesford, weeks after the 75-year-old asked Home Office ministers a parliamentary question about policy on policing raves. Around 500 revellers are thought to have gathered on a former airfield at the weekend. Police say no officers were hurt as a result of the attack on the car at Parham, Suffolk, early on Sunday'.

India: Ministry of Sound in Delhi (Times of India, 14 May 2007)

'The party had just begun to rock on Friday night when the Delhi police suddenly entered Ministry of Sound, a swank disc in South Delhi at around 8 pm and asked the owners to down the shutters by 10 pm. The owners argued with the police, saying they had all the pre-requisite licenses and papers. They kept the party going. However, after 12, the cops came again, this time armed with a challan for operating a disc after 12. They asked the partying crowd to leave the premises, went to the bar and asked the tenders to close it. The police also barricaded both the entries... Later, the Delhi Police spokesperson told us, "The action was initiated because of constant complaints from people living in the neighbouring areas. There were also violating some licensing rules"... But all this has only left the people who had come to party at MoS that night puzzled. Like Bir, who'd come with a friend. "This is ridiculous. Why are the cops here? And why are they asking us to leave?" he asked. Echoed Rahul, "This is just not done. We look forward to Friday night parties, and this is what you get.'

USA: Long Island Drug Raid (Long Island Press, 29 May 2007)

'East Quogue’s Neptune Beach Club, located on Dune Road, found itself in a drug scandal involving 15 individuals this past weekend. Southampton Town Police Street Crime Unit reports that of the fifteen arrested, six were from various towns on Long Island. At the popular nightclub, an undercover police officer bought Ecstasy twice from three different people and arrested the three on felony charges on Monday. The other twelve allegedly possessed and/or ingested Ecstasy; cocaine; Vicodin; ketamine; GHB; anabolic steroids; marijuana; Percocet; drug scales; and packaging materials in the Tiana Beach parking lot... People other than the fifteen were arrested for urinating and consuming alcohol in public as well as littering'.

Monday, December 22, 2008

December policing round-up

England (London): squatted pub evicted (Islington News, 19 December 2008)

'Bailiffs have evicted squatters who turned an empty Holloway pub into a late-night basement rave club.The squatters, who are believed to have moved in a month ago, were ejected from Tufnells in Tufnell Park Road on Tuesday morning... A bailiff, who did not wish to be named, said: “They didn’t really trash it that bad. They took their mattresses with them when they left. It was all very peaceful.”He added: “They put mattresses upstairs and turned the cellar into a club. One guy had a Buddha room with joss sticks and plants and a statue of Buddha.”'

England (Essex): 'Ten jailed after police battle at rave (Saffron Waldon Reporter, 11 December 2008)

'An illegal rave near Great Chesterford earlier this year which resulted in police helicopters from three forces being scrambled has resulted in 10 men being jailed. Chelmsford Crown Court was told on Monday that 60 officers were injured in the rave raid and were damaged. Objects thrown at police included glass bottles, cans, stones, metal poles, lighted pieces of wood, logs and mud and fireworks. Ten men, some of whom gave themselves up to police later after seeing themselves on BBC's Crimewatch, admitted violent disorder and were jailed for a total of almost 10 years. The court was told that officers from Essex, Norfolk, Suffolk, Cambridgeshire, Herts, Beds and the Metropolitan Police were drafted in for the raid. As well as the defendants sentenced today another 34 were arrested for drugs offences'.

India: Mumbai drug testing (Times of India, 21 December 2008)

'The anti-narcotics cell (ANC) of the Mumbai police has sent summons to 36 people, including 10 girls, who have tested positive for narcotic substances at a rave party in Juhu on October 5. The state forensic laboratory submitted its second report on Friday, which contained the test details of the 36 partygoers. "They have to present themselves before the court or the police in a week's time," said deputy commissioner of police (ANC) Vishwas Nangre-Patil. "The second report submitted showed that of the 43 samples, 36 tested positive for Ecstasy. In the first report, 109 people had tested positive for drugs," he said... The police had booked 231 people for allegedly being under the influence of the narcotic substances. Those who tested positive for Ecstasy would have to appear before court and file fresh bail pleas'.

India: open air parties banned in Goa

'While hotels, big and small, will continue with their planned new year's eve programme, albeit on a smaller scale and with incentives attract tourists thrown in many feel the positive part of the ban on open beach parties from December 23 to January 5, will be the stopping of rave parties. The open air parties with their dubious links to drug peddling and consuming will be dealt with firmly, police sources told TOI. "Rave parties on the beach or anywhere else will not be allowed at all," IGP Kishen Kumar asserted. If any complaint is received, the police will "immediately" take action and stop the parties. "Besides, we will keep strict vigil on all such areas," he added. Police sources further said, "This year we haven't noticed rave parties as locals are not taking any chances in allowing them to use their place either." ' ( (Times of India, 21 December 2008)

'Unwilling to take the ban on beach parties lying down and feeling cheated by the state government's decision to ban open beach parties shack owners have decided to submit a memorandum to the government demanding compensation. Cruz Cardozo, president of the Goa Shack Owners Welfare Society, said that the government should either compensate shack owners for their losses or forfeit the license fee of Rs 30,000.... He said many shack owners are feeling the heat as they have paid huge advances to book bands and other entertainers for Christmas and New Year celebrations (Times of India, 22 December 2008)

Botswana: Nightclubs closed by police (Mmegi online, 26 November 2008)

'Lawyers acting for two Gaborone nightclubs will this week apply for the jailing of the Commissioner of Police for contempt of court. Others to be cited in the application, for defying a court order, include the Station Commander of Gaborone West Police Station and the section leader of a unit that raided the nightclubs on Friday night.

The lawyers are instituting contempt of court proceedings after the police ordered the closure of Grand West and Satchmo's nightclubs last Friday night. The police claimed that the two nightclubs - both in Gaborone West - were operating without licences. The two nightclubs have been closed since Friday on police orders. The police action comes after the High Court granted an interim order that, among others, stipulates that the police should not harass the nightclubs following their application seeking an interdict against the police'.

Saturday, February 24, 2007

Essex police target raves

From Herts and Essex News, 15 February 2007:

Raving the day!

Illegal ravers were stopped dead in their tracks when police broke up an event in a remote farm in the Dunmow and Walden area... The dozen or so organisers were setting up a generator and sound equipment in a barn at Spains End Farm, in Cornish Hall End, at 10pm on Saturday when officers swooped. As police from Saffron Walden, Braintree and Great Yeldham seized the machinery, people were spotted running across adjoining fields. The Essex Police helicopter and Braintree dog unit were deployed. Six people were detained but not charged as no damage had been caused.

Police pounced after a tip-off from Suffolk police and reports from residents who spotted convoys of cars on the rural back roads in the Finchingfield and Sampfords area. Operations commander Supt Colin Steele said: "We would like to thank the residents as they helped officers identify these people, especially one taxi driver who contacted us and gave us some very important information. Essex is not a force for rave organisers to chance their luck with. We will prevent, disrupt and enforce measures to ensure their events do not take place in Essex, thereby ensuring public safety."

Last August, violence erupted between 600 ravers and police in Great Chesterford as officers tried to break up an illegal event. Missiles were thrown and nine officers injured

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Dance before the police come

USA, Harrisburg: party-goers jailed

The city of Harrisburg [Pennsylvania] violated the rights of the out-of-state residents cited for violating a parks ordinance in connection with last week’s McCormick’s Island Camp-out With the DJs, a civil rights attorney said Tuesday... At least 127 out-of-state people were cited by police for illegal assembly under an ordinance that requires a permit for any gathering of more than 20 people in a city park to listen to music or make speeches. Police said they discovered the party during while searching for Christian Yanez, 27, a city man who drowned trying to swim to the party in the middle of the night. The planned 48-hour party was cut short after Yanez’ body was found in the Susquehanna River around 9 a.m. on the morning of Sept. 2. Later that day, police began stopping partygoers as they came ashore on shuttle boats provided event organizers. After being searched and having their identification checked, state residents were told they would receive a citation in the mail and released. Those from out of state were handcuffed and shackled, then transported to police headquarters, where they were held for up to 12 hours awaiting arraignment by night court Judge Robert Jennings III. Jennings set their fines at $1,051, the maximum allowed under the ordinance, and sent those unable to pay the fine, or that amount as bail, to Dauphin County Prison (Patriot News, 11 September 2007).

Though almost all the revellers were eventually released by Monday, they were ‘strip searched, deloused and put into uniforms’ on arrival at Dauphin County Prison, a notoriously harsh and overcrowded US prison (In the Mix, 9 September 2007)

USA, New York: DJ arrested in gay club bust

The staff at Mr. Black, a gay dance club located on Broadway and Bleecker, spent Labor Day weekend in lockdown... Seventeen Mr. Black employees and patrons were arrested during a 4 a.m. Saturday-morning raid conducted by a small army of police—25 to 40 strong, according to one eyewitness (including a few undercovers in drag)—from the Manhattan South narcotics squad. On the morning of the raid, after police pushed past Connie Girl, who works at the door, they reportedly asked, "Who's the DJ?" When Scissor Sisters DJ Sammy Jo identified himself, he was cuffed. His friend Jean Von Baden, a DJ visiting from Denmark and in town on holiday, was also arrested...

Sonny Shirley, an employee, says in an e-mail: "I asked the officers outside why we are being arrested and was finally told, 'You don't have any rights, shut the fuck up.'" Several employees say they saw the cops high-fiving each other as they were cuffing club patrons and employees. "The officers were giving high fives to each other in the bar while we were standing with our hands up as some of our people were being taken away," says Ladyfag. "It was just insensitive and unnecessary." Roze Ibraheem, the head of Mr. Black's security, says that police at the station referred to transgendered doorgirl Connie Girl as "it" and "that" and that "other derogatory anti-gay statements were made." Ibraheem says that at the club, police told the crowd of about 115 people: "Sorry, homos, you're gonna have to find somewhere else to go hang out," and that one employee was referred to as a "fairy" in passing.

During booking, many of the employees were strip-searched and made to do the "cough and squat"... Mr. Black employees don't deny that drugs can get inside the club; but they do deny that they aid or abet it, and they say they certainly don't sell it. "Bad things can happen anywhere. We're a nightclub; we're not having high tea. There are people who do drugs and get drunk," says Ladyfag. "But this was like we were criminals. You just got the feeling like this is what it must have been like: We're gay and we're being attacked." (Village Voice, 11 September 2007).

England, Great Yarmouth: police station clash

The conflict between police and party goers escalates in the East of England as the crackdown on free parties continues (see previous posts):

Eight people have been charged after a police station in Norfolk came under siege at the weekend. Five of the eight revellers, who are believed to be predominantly male, have been released on bail pending further enquiries while the other two are still at Great Yarmouth police station, where the event took place.They are all due to appear at the town's magistrates' court on September 6. More than 100 people hurled beer cans, bottles, bricks and blocks of wood at officers and tried to storm Great Yarmouth police station in the early hours of Sunday morning. The angry confrontations were sparked after sound equipment destined for a rave on the town's Harfrey's industrial estate was seized. So far 44 of the ravers' cars have been seized for evidence and nearly 20 people have been arrested (Norwich Evening News, 20 August 2007)

Police last night warned that illegal raves will not be tolerated during the final bank holiday of the summer. Norfolk and Suffolk police chiefs issued a joint statement in a bid to prevent a repeat of Sunday's bloody confrontation, when ravers clashed with riot officers on an industrial estate in the town... At the height of last week's violence, more than 100 officers responded in riot gear and used CS spray to force out some 300 revellers who had barricaded themselves in a factory yard at Harfrey's industrial estate after the rave had been disrupted (EDP, 24 August 2007).

Sunday, April 12, 2026

‘It was so queer being awake and having dreams’: social conformity and utopian subversion in the Magic Faraway Tree

So a mere 80 years after it was first published there is finally a movie version of Enid Blyton's The Magic Faraway Tree - the favourite book of my childhood. I haven't got too much to say about the film, I enjoyed its quite rightly modernised take and it certainly renders a very good tree. But does it fully explore the anarchist/communist tension of the  Land of Do-as-you-Please vs  the Land of Take-What-You-Want?! Luckily for you (!) I wrote 5000 words on the Enchanted Wood series of books  as part of a 'children's literature and cultural diversity' module at Goldsmiths a few years ago, exploring among other things its counter cultural influence and its utopian dimensions. This is slightly edited from text originally written in 2013.

Poster from 2026 movie release

Enid Blyton was the best selling British children’s author of the 20th century and nearly 50 years after her death remains in the top twenty most-borrowed children’s authors in British libraries (British Library, 2013). Nevertheless, her reputation has been controversial, with her work frequently criticised for its perceived lack of literary quality and later for its archaic treatment of class, gender and race (discussed in Ray, 1982, and Rudd, 2000).

This essay focuses on a series of Blyton’s fantasy novels known as the  ‘Enchanted Wood’ or ‘Faraway Tree’ trilogy. Having established their popularity and influence, I will draw upon critical literature on fairy tales and children’s fantasy literature to explore whether these works can be dismissed as vehicles for socialising children into the dominant ideology or whether they provide scope for more utopian readings. 

In the course of a writing career spanning almost fifty years, Blyton (1897-1968) covered most of the genres of children’s literature, including detective stories, holiday adventures and school stories. In an overview of Blyton’s work, Ray (1982) identifies another thread as being her ‘Fantasy World’ stories, starting with ‘Adventures of the Wishing Chair’ in 1937, in which two children travel to magical lands via a special chair. This was followed by the trilogy of ‘The Enchanted Wood’ (Blyton, 1939), ‘The Magic Faraway Tree’ (Blyton, 1943) and ‘The Folk of the Faraway Tree’ (Blyton, 1946).

In the ‘Enchanted Wood’ trilogy, a group of children who have recently moved from the city to the countryside discover a mysterious wood at the centre of which is ‘the oldest and most magic tree in the world’ (Blyton, 1939, p.16). This ‘Magic Faraway Tree’ is populated by various fairy tale-like characters and is the gateway to different lands which can be accessed from its upper branches as they pass by like clouds. Journeying into these worlds, the children have numerous adventures accompanied by Moon-face (a benevolent magician who lives at the top of the tree), his fairy neighbour Silky and the cookware-clad Saucepan Man.  


Illustration (and similar below) from 1971 edition, artist unknown

The series does not tend to feature in the canon of children's fantasy literature conventionally taken to run from ‘Alice in Wonderland’ via the ‘Chronicles of Narnia’ on to Ursula K Le Guin's 'Earthsea' series and beyond. There is no mention of Blyton in Goldthwaite's 'The Natural History of Make-Believe' (1996) - a 'history of the world's imaginative literature for children' - or in Deborah O'Keefe's 'Readers in Wonderland:  the liberating worlds of fantasy fiction' (2004).

Conversely, the books tend to be somewhat overlooked in works which focus on the life and writings of Blyton. They are mentioned only in passing in Duncan McLaren’s ‘Looking for Enid’ (2007) and Barbara Stoney’s standard biography of the author (Stoney, 2006). David Rudd’s ‘Enid Blyton and the Mystery of Children’s Literature’ (2000), which seeks to positively reconsider Blyton’s oeuvre, focuses primarily on the Famous Five, Noddy and Malory Towers books. 

Nevertheless the Enchanted Wood novels have remained in print continuously and have had an enduring impact on the memories and imaginations of generations of readers. In 2003 for instance, The Magic Faraway Tree was the only one of Blyton’s books to feature in the UK Top 100 Best-Loved Books selected in the BBC’s Big Read survey (BBC, 2004).  Recent spin-offs have included a 2000 audio book featuring the actress Kate Winslett, a 2004 animated TV series and a 2012 BBC radio adaption.  The books featured prominently in a major exhibition in 2013, ‘Mystery, Magic and Midnight Feasts - The Many Adventures of Enid Blyton’ held at Seven Stories: the National Centre for Children’s Books. In the same year the national ‘Storytelling Superstar’ competition to mark World Book Day was won by somebody reading from ‘The Folk of the Faraway Tree’ (Bayne, 2013).

In his history of the fairy tale, Jack Zipes (2012. p.x) distinguishes between  the oral storytelling of anonymous folk tales passed down through generations, and ‘literary fairy tales, which emanated from the oral traditions through the medium of manuscripts and print’  from the 16th century onwards.  These literary tales were rarely if ever straightforward renderings of oral folklore, but involved the reworking and adapting of traditional material by named authors for diverse purposes. The classic rewriting of older folk tales developed into a wider genre in which new stories were, and continue to be invented along similar lines featuring characters, tropes, and situations from older stories combined with additional elements.

Fairy tales were at the heart of Enid Blyton’s early writing, including her own versions of classic stories such as Cinderella and the Sleeping Beauty in ‘Fairy tales for the Little Ones’ (1924) and new stories composed by Blyton herself in ‘Enid Blyton’s Book of Fairies’ (1924). She wrote numerous fairy-themed and fantasy stories for the ‘Sunny Stories’ magazine that she edited, and in which ‘The Enchanted Wood’ was first serialised in 1938.

Notwithstanding Rudd’s characterisation of Blyton’s style as closer to oral storytelling than the literary tradition (Rudd, 1997), the Faraway Tree novels can certainly be considered as literary fairy tales, as they are written texts within which Blyton blends folkloric and traditional fairy tale elements with the products of her own imagination to create new stories.  In a manner which Hunt  (2000) characterises as Blyton’s ‘pot pourri’ approach and  Rudd (2008, p.263) interprets more generously as her ‘diffuse and extended’ intertextuality, we find traditional supernatural creatures such as fairies, gnomes and pixies; animal helpers and magical tools; and nursery rhyme characters such as the Old Woman who Lived in a Shoe. Perhaps most striking is the Faraway Tree itself - with its roots in the earth and its branches in the sky it recalls ‘Yggdrasil, the norse World Tree’, perhaps derived from Blyton’s childhood love of Norse mythology (Ray 1982, p.141). The novels also feature episodes and characters familiar from other literary fairy tales. For example McLaren (2007, p.274-277) suggests that the malevolent goblins in the stories may have been inspired by the book that Blyton declared was her favourite as a child – George MacDonald’s ‘The Princess and the Goblin’.  

For Zipes (2012), literary fairy tales are used ‘either to bring about conformity or to question conformity to the dominant civilizing process of a society’ (xi); they may ‘reconcile us to our social conventions and religious beliefs’ or ‘project alternatives to the status quo’ (xii).  Zipes argues that many of the classic literary fairy tales written by the likes of the Brothers Grimm, Charles Perrault and Hans Christian Anderson ‘function as part of the bourgeois socialization process’  (p.69) and ‘reinforce dominant religious and patriarchal attitudes about gender, mating, law and order’ (p.xi). On the other hand he identifies a body of ‘provocative counter-cultural fairy tales’ from the likes of Oscar Wilde, George MacDonald and L.Frank Baum which criticise social mores and aim at ‘inverting and subverting the world with hope’ (p.103). Alison Lurie (1990, pp.x-xi)  likewise celebrates what she terms ‘subversive works of children’s literature’, loosely defined as texts that ‘mock current assumptions and express the imaginative, unconventional, non-commercial view of the world’.

Before moving on to consider where the Faraway Tree trilogy should be placed in relation to Zipes’ socialisation/subversion dichotomy, I have to acknowledge that much of what follows is based on adult reader reactions to the texts, and of course I too am approaching the subject as an adult. In fact over the course of my life I have read the Faraway Tree trilogy from several different subject positions – as a child reader, when these were among my favourite books; as a parent reading these books to my own children; and now from an academic perspective. In practice it is difficult to disentangle childhood and parental memories, nostalgia and apparently theoretically grounded interpretations.  As Jacqueline Rose (1984, p.12) argues, part of what she terms ‘the impossibility of children’s fiction’ is that childhood ‘is never simply left behind’ but ‘persists as something which we endlessly rework in our attempt to build an image of our own history’.  In reflecting on how Blyton’s work appeals to children, I recognise that I cannot avoid approaching the subject through the filter of my adult self with its own investment in my childhood and those of others.

Radical critics of Blyton from the 1970s onwards saw her work as situated firmly within the camp of reactionary socialization. Blyton was one of the main authors taken to task in Bob Dixon's 'Catching them young’, which sought to critique racism, sexism and class bias in children’s fiction.  For Dixon (1977b), ‘What overwhelmingly pervades every aspect of Blyton’s work… is the insistence on conformity to the most, narrow, establishment-type beliefs, practices and values’ (p.68), the converse of which is ‘a fear of what is different or unusual… a fear of anything that’s new and threatens change’ (p.79).

Dixon (1977a, p.100) finds evidence of 'gratuitous racism' in Blyton’s Noddy books and elsewhere, with their golliwogs and their association of 'fear with black faces'. He also argues that Blyton’s works feature ‘culturally-conditioned “masculine” and “feminine” roles’’ (1977b p.66) and the presentation of ‘the middle-class English’ as the ‘assumed norm’ (p.68-9). 

Dixon  mainly draws his examples from Blyton’s Famous Five books. While it may be legitimate to criticise the author on the basis of this major series, it may also be true that not all texts in Blyton’s huge body of work treat race, gender and class in exactly the same way. I would argue that Dixon’s critique is not entirely accurate in relation to the Faraway Tree novels.

Firstly racism does not really feature in these stories, if only because the exotic otherness which Blyton and other authors of her time may have routinely projected on to ‘foreigners’ is supplied instead by supernatural and fairy tale creatures who do not seem to relate to any particular racial or national stereotypes.  

In terms of gender stereotypes, there is a clear gender-based division of labour in the children’s household. ‘Mother’ looks after the house while the barely-mentioned Father goes out to some undefined job. As for the children, the very first paragraph of The Magic Faraway Tree tells us that ‘The girls had to help their mother in the house, and Jo help his father in the garden’ (Blyton, 1943, p.5).

Jo, the older brother of the siblings, tends to take the lead in the action and tell his sisters what to do. But the girl characters are hardly passive. They participate fully in most adventures, climbing the tree and sometimes initiating action. For instance, when Jo is taken prisoner by The Magic Snowman it is his sisters who come to his rescue, taking part in the giant snowball fight of the Battle of the Bears (Blyton, 1939, p.62).

We should also bear in mind that in writing stories in which girls and boys participated in adventures together, Blyton was amongst the authors breaking new ground in this period.  Ray (1982, p.18) observes that  ‘Before 1930, books about everyday life had tended to be about boys for boys or about girls for girls’ whereas subsequently ‘there was a definite trend towards writing books that would appeal to both boys and girls’.

If class snobbery is a feature of some of Blyton’s fictional worlds, it is less so in the Enchanted Wood trilogy.  In the opening chapter of the series it is made clear that the children are from a relatively poor family whose ‘Mother hoped there would be some one to give her washing to do, then she would make enough money to buy a few hens’ (Blyton, 1939, p.8). While in other Blyton stories the main characters may sometimes seem to look down on children of a lower social class, in these stories it is the children themselves who are the subject of condescension. When their ‘stuck up’ cousin Connie comes to stay she looks down on them and their ‘country’ clothes (Blyton, 1946, Chapter One).

It is undoubtedly true that Blyton intended her work to put across a message about how she believed children should behave and to promote certain values. Blyton 'often builds the narrator into the text as an intrusive persona, by turns 'jolly' and insistently moralizing' (Hunt, 1994, p.38)  and there are many examples in these stories of  characters variously castigated as ‘naughty’ or ‘spoilt’, while unhappy outcomes sometimes ‘serve them right’. 

In a 1949 article  Blyton wrote that she was ‘not only out to tell stories’ but to ‘inculcate decent thinking, loyalty, honesty, kindliness, and all the things that children should be taught’ (cited in Stoney, 2006, p.195). While Blyton may have believed these were solid ‘British’ values, they are relatively politically neutral. The Enchanted Wood novels lack the explicit appeals to Empire, Queen and Country found in the fiction of some of her contemporaries, a fact that may explain the global success of many of her books in translation. 

Moreover these ‘decent’ values do not always equate simply with ‘narrow, establishment’  ideology (Dixon, 1977b, p.68). When basic fairness is violated for instance, Blyton sanctions her characters’ disobedience and rebellion against authority. Unjustly incarcerated in ‘Dame Slap’s School’ with its regime of arbitrary violence and impossible to answer questions, the children throw down their pencils in protest at the ‘silly nonsense’ and escape (Blyton, 1939, p.127).  

In any event, as Sarland (2005, p.46) notes, the notion that children’s fiction simply ‘constructs readers in specific ideological formations and thus enculturates them into the dominant discourse of capitalism’ has been challenged by a greater emphasis on the different ways texts are actually read and interpreted, with readers ‘not simply determined by what they read’.  Judging by the reminiscences of adult writers, the Faraway Tree series is certainly not recalled as a narrow, conformist morality tale. New Zealand poet Bill Manhire (2000, p.56), choosing 'The Magic Faraway Tree' as the special book of his childhood, argues that the author’s  'imaginative power... makes the usual criticism of Enid Blyton - as stylist and moralist - irrelevant'. These stories were also amongst those children’s writer Susan Hill (2009, p.24-5) had in mind when she wrote that 'Enid Blyton excited us, took us into worlds of mystery, magic, adventure and fun’.


V for Vendetta - Evie gets a bedtime story from the Magic Faraway Tree

Intriguingly the Faraway Tree stories have achieved a particular cachet in British alternative political and cultural milieus.  The Magic Faraway Tree is referenced in Alan Moore and David Lloyd's cult graphic novel ‘V for Vendetta’ for instance, a copy of the book being left as a gift by the anarchist main character who later refers in a speech to the Land of Do-as-you-Please and Land of Take-What-You-Want (Moore and Lloyd, 1990, p.195). Other examples include A Faraway Tree festival held in Suffolk in 2012 &13 and an Irish folk music collective, The Magickal Folk of the Faraway Tree (formed in 2002).

The novels also supplied imagery to the opponents of the Government’s road building programme in the 1990s who established direct action protest camps.  A participant recalled that The Enchanted  Wood was  ‘One of the most  popular books at Skyward camp at Newbury…  At Fairmile in Devon, protesters referred to themselves as "Fairies." At the centre of the camp stood one large oak tree, complete with four tree houses,  which, for protesters, came to resemble the magic faraway tree’ (Letcher, 2001,p.150).

With all this mind, I will now consider the extent to which the Faraway Tree books can be read as offering potentially utopian visions and to embody ‘the liberating potential of the fantastic’ that Jack Zipes (2012,p.168) identifies in some children’s stories. 

At the heart of the Faraway Tree series is the possibility of escape from the everyday into other lands, some benign, some less so. Alternative dimensions directly accessible to children are a feature of popular fantasy literature, from the Narnia chronicles to the ‘differing space of multiple worlds’ (Cantrell, 2010, p.303) in Pulman’s His Dark Materials. Typically, the portal into these worlds is something relatively mundane – a wardrobe (C.S. Lewis), a knife (Pulman) or in Blyton’s case, a tree a short distance from the house. 

The Enchanted Wood is a liminal space, reached by crossing a boundary – leaping over a ditch – and in which the rules of the everyday world are partially suspended. But as Manhire (2000, p.56) suggests, its appeal is partially that ‘Faraway is quite close by’, with Blyton overriding ‘our habitual distinctions between what is real and what is fantastic. If children can climb a ladder into other lands, the people of those lands can as easily descend to ours’. 

This proximity carries with it the dream of escape. In Jacqueline Wilson's novel Best Friends  (2004, p.74), the troubled narrator hides a letter 'between the pages of my best-ever book, The Enchanted Wood’ and wishes that she ‘could find the Enchanted Wood, climb up the Faraway Tree, and clamber up the ladder into the land above, and never ever come back' (p.74) [Wilson herself wrote 'The Magic Faraway Tree: a new adventure' in 2022]. Similarly, in her transgender memoir, Lo (2007, p.19) recalls a Singapore childhood reading Blyton on a balcony overlooking a forest: ‘I imagined that Moon-face and the Saucepan man were tucked away somewhere in the trees. I longed to find the Faraway Tree whose branches pierced the sky'. 

If escapism is intrinsic to the pleasure of children’s fantasy literature, it is ‘not so much an escape from something as a liberation into something, into openness and possibility’ (O’Keefe, 2003, p.11).  The Enchanted Wood is both a fantasy world of possibility in its own right, and a place from which the children can journey on to the other lands that pass by the top of the Faraway Tree.  Some of these lands could be described as dystopian spaces where children are potentially in peril, such as the The Land of Tempers or The Land of Dame Slap. But many more of them are places where children’s wishes come true: there are Lands of Marvels, of Presents, Treats and Birthdays. 

To what extent can this assemblage of lands be termed utopian?  Bradford at al  (2007, p.2-3) have sketched out what they term as ‘transformative utopianism’ in children’s literature, characterised as ‘fictional imaginings of transformed world orders… which propose new social and political arrangements’ but they also describe utopias more broadly as visions that  ‘imagine a better world than the one that readers/audiences currently know’ (p.4)..  In his 'Utopia and Science Fiction’ (1978) Raymond Williams likewise distinguishes between the 'systematic utopia' of new social structures and a looser 'heuristic utopia' in which 'the substance of new values and relations is projected, with comparatively little attention to institutions’.

In these stories, Blyton certainly does not propose a new political and social order as any kind of systematic/transformative utopia. In fact one feature of the Faraway Tree worlds is that it is not burdened by an over-arching cosmology or hierarchy. In some Lands there may be soldiers, policemen or wizards (easily befuddled by children where necessary), but it is unclear who, if anybody, is in charge in this parallel universe. In this respect, Blyton’s work is akin to the children’s literature of Victorian and Edwardian England which O’Keefe (2003, p.14) describes as featuring ‘loosely organised worlds where characters wandered through episodic adventures’.

The utopian aspects of the Faraway Tree books are more ‘heuristic’, for while Blyton does not delineate new social structures she does invite the reader to dream. If nothing else the multiplicity of different lands implies that other worlds organised on a variety of principles are imaginable and indeed in some cases desirable.  As Fanny exclaims in The Magic Faraway Tree, it’s ‘so queer being awake and having dreams’ (Blyton, 1943, p.76).

Blyton’s utopian lands can be seen as part of a wider tradition of imagined worlds of abundance and license, perhaps best summed up in the names of two of the most vividly imagined lands at the top of the tree – The Land of Take-What-You- Want and The Land of Do-As-You-Please. In the former, as Moon-Face describes it, visitors can ‘take whatever you want for yourselves without paying a penny’ (Blyton, 1939, p.112), while in the latter the children are told ‘Just think of all the things you want to do – you can do them all in the Land of Do-As-You-Please’ (Blyton, 1943,  p.80).

This ‘utopia of free consumption’, to use Raymond Williams’ term (1978) has echoes of Rabelais’ 16th century fictional Abbey of Theleme with its one Rule of ‘Do what thou wilt’ and its abundance of fine food, clothes and other pleasures (Rabelais, 2006, p.367-373). Echoes too of the Medieval trope of Cockaigne as the land of plenty,  ’a realm of miraculous abundance’ in a ‘World Turned Upside Down’ where food and drink of every kind are freely to be had (Minton, 1991, p.39).


Fay çe que vouldras (do what thou wilt), illustration by Gustave Doré

Blyton was certainly well-read enough to have been familiar with these antecedents, but the fantasy of plenty is one that might be expected to spontaneously arise wherever people are hungry and in this respect the period in which the books were written is surely significant. The Enchanted Wood was first serialised in the late 1930s, towards the end of a period of high unemployment and economic depression. The second two books were written during and immediately after the Second World War, when food shortages and rationing were a feature of everyday life. Before setting off to the The-Land-of-Take-What-You-Want we are told that ‘money was very scarce, and the children did not have as much to eat as they would have liked’ (Blyton, 1939, p.35). For children living through the austerity of this period the abundance of food in these books must have been tantalising, but even in relatively more affluent times the fantasy of an instant gratification of bodily appetites has a strong appeal. The books are filled with feasting featuring both familiar and fantasy foodstuffs, such as exploding ‘Toffee Shock’ sweets,  ‘Pop Biscuits’ and sherbet-filled ‘Google Buns’.

Many children’s stories seemingly offer this kind of wish fulfilment only to teach a lesson that children cannot always have what they want, and must learn to control their appetites. In his Freudian account ‘The Uses of Enchantment’ (1976), Bruno Bettelheim argues that teaching such lessons is precisely the function of fairy tales – children are taught to temper the Pleasure Principle with the Reality Principle. Hansel and Gretel for instance forces ‘children to recognise the dangers of unrestrained oral greed’, with their eating of the gingerbread house provoking the witch as ‘personification of the destructive aspects of orality’ (p.162).

Blyton however allows her child characters to have their cake and eat it too. While they get into some scrapes in the The-Land-of-Take-What-You-Want they are able to return home with the goat and chickens that their mother had wished for to supply them with eggs and milk. And no harm comes to Bessie in the Land of Birthdays when her wishes are granted with ‘an enormous dish of strawberries’ and ‘jugs of all kinds of delicious drinks, and cakes and jellies and fruit’ (Blyton, 1939, p.182).

We can see parallels between the centrality of food in The Faraway Tree and the ubiquity of ‘banquet images – food, drink, swallowing’ that Mikhail Bakhtin (1984, p. 278) identified in the work of Rabelais and more broadly in carnivalesque popular-festive culture. For Bakhtin, ‘The feast means liberation’ and ‘is a temporary transfer to the utopian world’ (p. 276).  Oittinen (2006, p. 86-7)  argues that  'carnivalism (folk culture) and children's culture have many... things in common' (p.86) and sees Blyton’s focus on feasting as exemplifying a recognition of children’s culture, intrinsic to which is the fact that  'tastes are part of the child's world of experience, part of his/her emotional life' (p.87).

Other aspects of the ‘carnivalesque’ also feature in Blyton’s novels, perhaps helping to explain part of their appeal to children. The nonsense rhymes of the Saucepan Man and his humorous mishearing of other people’s remarks  are ‘comic verbal compositions’ (Bakhtin, p.5) which play with language and laughter, and the adventures in many of the lands are essentially festive episodes of play and license where children can take-what-they-want/do-as-they-please  in a carnivalesque ‘suspension of all hierarchical rank, privileges, norms and prohibitions’ (Bakhtin, 1984,p.10).

Fred Inglis (1997, p.131) remarks that Blyton’s work often features ‘a harmony of free, mutual life’ and we can identify this as a further utopian element in these texts. There is a harmonious relationship between humans and nature, with the children encountering various animal helpers, such as the rabbits that join the fight to save the faraway tree from destruction (Blyton, 1946, p.157). These relationships are an extension of those that exist between the children, who despite occasional bickering look after each other in unfamiliar situations away from adult supervision, and between the inhabitants of the Faraway Tree. The latter, including Moon-face, Silky the fairy, the Saucepan Man,  the Angry Pixie and Dame Washalot, form a kind of alternative non-familial household of relative equals. 

Writing about Blyton’s beloved ‘Princess and the Goblin’ by George MacDonald, Zipes (2012, p.111) notes that ‘There is never one hero, rather there are always male and female protagonists, who learn to follow their deep inclinations, respect each other’s needs and talents, and share each other’s visions’. Much the same could be said of Blyton’s approach of having a group of friends and/or siblings as a kind of collective hero in these and many of her books, providing too multiple points of potential identification for child readers of different ages and genders.

One of the ‘regressive’ aspects that Zipes (2012, p.176) identifies in classical fairy tales is that the ‘happy end’ is usually dependent upon ‘arbitrary authority (generally in the form of monarchs or monarchs in the making)’ whose ‘Raw power is used to right wrongs’.  Blyton departs from this convention – when the future of the Faraway Tree is threatened by Trolls mining for jewels at its roots, it is the children and their animal and tree-dwelling friends who defeat them and save the tree without any recourse to external powers (Blyton, 1946, pp.138-157).

The woodland setting for such imaginings has a long history in English culture, including in the work of Shakespeare who sets his suspension of social norms in comedies such as ‘As You Like It’ and ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream’ in  enchanted forests of his own. Northrop Frye’s influential interpretation of this as the ‘drama of the Green World’ can also be applied to Blyton’s  Enchanted Wood, an ‘ideal world of innocence and romance’ away from the confines of ‘the normal world’ which is also linked ‘to the dream world that we create out of own desires’ (Frye, 1957, p.182-3). If in Shakespearean comedy the desires unblocked in the Green World are sexual ones, Blyton attends to the desires of young children – for endless treats, fairground rides, sweets and presents. 

In fairy and fantasy stories there is typically a tension between what Tolkien (2006) termed the ‘primary’ world of the everyday and the imagined ‘secondary world’ of adventure and mystery which the characters slip into.  The latter can be a frightening place, but Blyton always manages this tension in a way that ultimately reassures her young readers. 

Within the various Lands the children visit, the main dangers are those faced by children everywhere – separation (as the Lands move on) and the unpredictable outbursts and occasional violence of beings larger than themselves. There is little sense of danger to life itself, and the supernatural creatures encountered tends to be mostly benign (brownies and elves), mischievous or disruptive (the ‘red goblins’) rather than terrifying or evil.  Blyton’s fairies are of the whimsical kind criticised by the folklorist Katherine Briggs (1967), who noted the gradual diminution of literary fairies from the 19th century compared with their fearsome traditional counterparts. 

To use one of Blyton’s own chapter headings in The Magic Faraway Tree, it is always the case that ‘Everything Comes Right’. However wild the adventures, there is always the comforting order of home where there is nothing more to worry about than helping out with chores – in the eternal holiday of these books, even school is never mentioned. As with many of the best children’s fantasy books ‘readers immerse themselves in the journey of characters… in doing so, they experience the same movement away from and back to daily life, and the same exciting interval in between, in a brave new place’ (O’Keefe, p.33)

When Jack Zipes  writes about subversive/counter-cultural children’s literary fairy tales, the examples he gives are from writers who have ‘expressly tried to make their tales more emancipatory and critical’ (2012,p.170). As I have argued above there is ample material in the Faraway Tree books to enable utopian readings, but this does not mean that the author had any deliberate subversive intent. Blyton seems to have been commercially ambitious (and of course successful) and to have held fairly conservative views on matters such as Royalty, capital punishment and the family (Stoney, 2006).  There was though at least one area where Blyton does seems to have had a broadly progressive intent – in relation to child development and the natural world.

Enid Blyton completed a National Froebel Union kindergarten teaching course in 1918 and long before she became a children’s novelist had achieved national recognition for her columns in ‘Teachers World’ magazine and other education writings. Frederick Froebel’s 'belief in the importance of understanding nature' and learning 'through spending time in gardens and forest' (Bruce, 2012, p.15) clearly influenced Blyton who designed nature lessons with the aim of arousing in the child ‘something that will stay with him and delight him all his life – a lasting love for Nature with its many beauties and wonders’ (Blyton cited in Cadogan, 1997, p.105). The wonder at the natural world certainly shines through in the Faraway Tree books.

Beyond this, a Froebelian influence can perhaps be discerned in Blyton’s child-centred approach to writing. Blyton famously listened to children’s feedback about her stories, and took inspiration for her work from her observations of and interactions with children. (Stoney, 2006). This market research may have been sound business sense, but it also reflected a belief that children were worth paying attention to. As Blyton wrote in an early Teachers World column, ‘A child’s mind is wonderful in its simplicity, directness and sensitiveness’ and ‘as Froebel knew, a child is always seeking to express himself’ (Blyton, 1923, cited in Stoney, 2006, p.186).

It would be oversimplifying matters to say that this perspective enabled Blyton to directly address children in a manner unmediated by ideology, in particular the social constructions of childhood prevalent at the time. As Nodelman (2008, p.5) observes, since adults usually buy children’s books, the writer must make judgments based ‘not on what they believe will appeal to children but rather on what they believe adult consumers believe they know will appeal to children’. However it is clear that for the most part Blyton’s implied reader is the child not the parent.  She ‘writes uncompromisingly for a single audience, not winking over the children’s heads at other adults for approbation’ (Hunt, 2000, p.38).  In doing so, Blyton sometimes breaks the rule ‘which demands that the narrator be adult or child, one or the other’ (Rose ,1984, p.69). While generally she takes the narrative position of an adult, at times she appears to slip into sharing a child’s language and view of the world.  Blyton was criticised in this respect for ‘her irrationality as a child’ (Walter Hildick, cited in Rose, p.69), but this narrative device was perhaps a deliberate strategy to involve the child reader in a literary simulation of a peer-to-peer conversation.  The final line of the trilogy is a striking example of this. After Connie wishes that she could live by the Wood and ‘go up the Faraway Tree whenever you like’ the narrator concludes: ‘So do I, don’t you?’ (Blyton, 1946, p.185).

Enid Blyton’s Faraway Tree novels do not fit neatly into a typology which neatly divides children’s literary fairy stories  into either conformist morality tales or subversive utopias. Blyton has a clear agenda of promoting children’s behaviours she approved of, and the novels reflect then-contemporary values in regard to gender even if the racist and class-biased attitudes critics have identified in some of her works are largely absent in these.  On the other hand, she grants her child characters agency to act autonomously in utopian settings of companionship, abundance and freedom.  While Blyton may not have had a subversive intent, if latter day eco-protestors, graphic novelists and others of a radical persuasion can draw positively on their childhood memories of these books it is not as a result of a wilful misreading of the texts.  Blyton’s early Froebelian training and personal inclination led her to positively promote wonder at nature and to be attentive to children’s culture with its carnivalesque fantasies, and these found full expression in the worlds of the Faraway Tree.

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Reference : 

Neil Transpontine (2026), ‘It was so queer being awake and having dreams’:  social conformity and utopian subversion in the Magic Faraway Tree. https://history-is-made-at-night.blogspot.com/2026/04/it-was-so-queer-being-awake-and-having.html