The TV series "Design Life" broadcasted by BBC in the autumn of 2009 is Philippe Starck, a world-renowned designer who is trying to find the next iconic British designer. At the beginning of the show, Starck asked the question "Someone has returned to the UK". Is someone awake? This seems to indicate that the real premise of the show is a decrease in the assumption depicting British design. Stark believes that the UK has never seen real British design aesthetics since the 1960s Terrance Conran and Habitat, but that is so.
UK had earlier claimed that it began in late medieval times, but the establishment of Britain in 1707 brought about Britain 's national identity. The British concept was formed during the Napoleonic war between England and the first French Empire, and further developed during the Victorian era. The complicated history of the UK creates "special public consciousness and belonging awareness" in the UK and Ireland, Britain is "unique to the old identity" in the culture of "Scotland", "Wales" and "Ireland" Sex still resists the concept of homogenized British identity. Due to the longstanding differences between ethnicities, British identity in Northern Ireland is controversial, but the union's solid belief
This paper has proven that it is best to understand the historical relationship between Irish religion and national identity by focusing on the influence of the British Empire and evaluating it. Prior to the British attempting to conduct island political control, the Irish Catholic Church may provide a series of religious beliefs and experiences that are common to many people on the island, but religion is a political identity There is no relationship. From the Celtic era, from the Patrick era to the arrival of Anglo-Normans, Catholics were unable to connect fighting factions and tribes, including the scattered Irish society. Gradually efforts to link alien religion to alien rulers created a fusion of these two conceptually different identity elements in the Irish mind.
The influence of British colonialism on Irish Catholicism and national identity: oppression, difference between recurrence and opinion