The Changing of the Guard: Simon Akam (2006)
The British Army can trace its origins back to the Acts of Union of 1707 and its rich history involves conflicts both large and small in all corners of the globe.
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But as the twenty-first century dawned, the organisation found itself in a transitional phase and with something of an identity crisis. What exactly was its culture? What, with its resources, could it really be expected to achieve? What was its relevance to modern Britain?
Today’s guest, Simon Akam, sought to confront questions like these in his book Changing the Guard: The British Army Since 9/11. Grounded in his own first-hand experience and supported by hundreds of interviews, in this episode Akam explains the conclusions that he reached and the incredible resistance he experienced as he sought to bring his book to publication.
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Show Notes
Scene One: A tent in Camp Bastion, Helmand Province, Afghanistan. Jamie Loden edits a video.
Scene Two: Autumn 2006. Downing Street with Major-General Jonathan Shaw and Nigel Sheinwald.
Scene Three: 28 March 2006. The creation of the Royal Regiment of Scotland.
Memento: A copy of a tabloid newspaper from 2006.
People/Social
Presenter: Artemis Irvine
Guest: Simon Akam
Production: Maria Nolan
Podcast partner: Ace Cultural Tours
Theme music: ‘Love Token’ from the album ‘This Is Us’ By Slava and Leonard Grigoryan
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About Simon Akam
Simon Akam (@simonakam) is a British writer. Born in Cambridge, England, he held a Gap Year Commission in the British Army before studying English Literature at Oxford University. He later won a Fulbright scholarship to attend Columbia Journalism School in New York. Simon has worked for The New York Times, Reuters, Newsweek and The Economist, and his writing has appeared in numerous other British and American publications including The New Yorker, the London Review of Books, GQ, Outside and Bloomberg Businessweek.
His first book The Changing of the Guard - The British Army since 9/11 was published in 2021 to widespread acclaim, despite a concerted effort to ban it by the British military; it won the Templer First Book Award and was a Times Literary Supplement book of the year. Simon is currently under contract with HarperCollins in the UK and Grove Atlantic in the US to write his second book, Snowlines - Uphill Skiing and the Utility of Fear. He also co-hosts the writing podcast Always Take Notes with Rachel Lloyd.
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