Millions Like Us? :British Culture in the Second World War

Publication subTitle :British Culture in the Second World War

Author: Hayes   Nick   Hill   Jeff  

Publisher: Liverpool University Press‎

Publication year: 1999

E-ISBN: 9781781387696

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780853237631

Subject: D90 theory of law (jurisprudence);R Medicine and Health;Z2 Encyclopedias, Reference Books

Language: ENG

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Description

This collection of essays brings together the latest historical research on cultural production and reception during the Second World War. Its starting point is how this war was presented to, and understood by, contemporaries and how they differentiated it from earlier conflicts. Although this was particularly noticeable in the construction of ideas of inclusiveness and commonality where ‘the people’ pulled together to secure victory and a socially equitable peace, the essays also seek to explore the diversity of institutional and personal experiences. Essays look at major national institutions and industries such as the recently formed BBC, the culturally diverse and rapidly expanding commercial press, and the British film industry. The collection explores the role of the individual agent, with studies on established writers and composers, and how each related to the collective rationales of wartime.

Chapter

British Cinema and ‘The People’s War’

The People’s Radio: The BBC and its Audience, 1939-1945

Was it the Mirror Wot Won it? The Development of the Tabloid Press During the Second World War

A More Even Playing Field? Sport During and After the War

A Time for Hard Writers: The Impact of War on Women Writers

Safe and Sound: New Music in Wartime Britain

More Than ‘Music-While-You-Eat’? Factory and Hostel Concerts, ‘Good Culture’ and the Workers

‘When Work Is Over’: Labour, Leisure and Culture in Wartime Britain

Not Just a Case of Baths, Canteens and Rehabilitation Centres: The Second World War and the Recreational Provision of the Miners’ Welfare Commission in Coalmining Communities

‘You and I – All of Us Ordinary People’: Renegotiating ‘Britishness’ in Wartime

Postscript: A War Imagined

Index

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