Tuesday, August 1, 2006

Suez crisis: An affair to remember

Author: raj
Category: Current Affairs

An amusing tit-bit about Ian Fleming’s inspiration for the James Bond novels. A recent Economist’s article implies that one of the ramifications of the Suez crisis from half a century ago is reflected in fiction. Read The Suez Crisis on Economist.com

The major lesson of Suez for the British was that the country would never be able to act independently of America again. Unlike the French, who have sought to lead Europe, most British politicians have been content to play second fiddle to America.

Eden recuperated from the crisis in Ian Fleming’s house, Goldeneye, in Jamaica. It was an appropriate choice, as it was Fleming who was to mythologise the new relationship in his James Bond novels. The first, “Casino Royale”, was published to little attention in 1953, but the series took off in the years after the Suez crisis, offering some sort of literary consolation to a country coming to terms with its new, humbler status. The partnership between Bond and Felix Leiter, a CIA agent, reflected the way the British now liked to see things, the one suave, smart and endlessly resourceful, the other with a lot of money and a slightly plodding manner.

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