Nigel Rodgers
Nigel Rodgers | |
---|---|
Born | 1952 |
Alma mater | University of Cambridge |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Art, Philosophy, Architecture, History |
Institutions | The London Library, Authors' Club, Society of Authors |
Website | www.nigelrodgers.co.uk |
Nigel Rodgers (born 1952) is a British writer, environmentalist and critic.
Rodgers has a degree in history and history of art from Cambridge University.[1] He is the founder of Pipedown, the Campaign for Freedom from Piped Music,[2] and is a member of the Educational Writers' Group of the Society of Authors.
Work[]
He has written 15 books including Incredible Optical Illusions (Simon & Schuster 1998); The Traveller's Atlas with John Man and Chris Schüler (1999); Hitler and Churchill (Hodder 2001); Philosophers Behaving Badly with Mel Thompson;[3] Roman Architecture (2006); Roman Empire (2008); Understand Existentialism with Mel Thompson (Hodder, 2010); Existentialism Made Easy with Mel Thompson (Hodder, 2011); The Greek World (2010); The Art and Architecture of Ancient Greece (2012); Why Noise Matters with Arline Bronzaft, Francis McManus, John Stewart and Val Weedon (Routledge 2011); The Dandy — Peacock or Enigma? [4] and The Umbrella Unfurled (2013).[5] His latest books are Manet: his Life and Work (2015) The Bruegels (2016) and The Colosseum, a guide book-cum-history about Rome's most famous monument, from its inauguration in AD80 to its recent triumphant restoration, published in May 2018. His books have been translated into fourteen languages.
References[]
- ^ http://www.nigelrodgers.co.uk/
- ^ http://pipedown.org.uk
- ^ Rodgers, N., & Thompson, M. (2005). Philosophers behaving badly. London: Peter Owen.
- ^ Rodgers, N. (2012). The Dandy: Peacock or enigma?. London: Bene Factum.
- ^ http://www.nigelrodgers.co.uk/
- 1952 births
- Living people
- Writers from London
- Academics from London
- English sociologists
- Alumni of Queens' College, Cambridge
- British sociologists
- 20th-century British writers
- English historians of philosophy
- English philosophers
- Moral philosophers
- Writers about the Soviet Union