1st Edition

Britain and 1940 History, Myth and Popular Memory

By Malcolm Smith Copyright 2000

    1940 was the most significant year in European history this century. For Britain it was 'the finest hour', the beginning of the People's War. Britain and 1940 explores what the year meant for the people of Britain then and now.

    Covering the pre-history of 1940 in Britain, Malcolm Smith explores the great fear that a second world war would perhaps mean the end of British civilization and charts the development of the myths of Dunkirk, the Battle of Britain and the Blitz, and the great influence they have had on our national consciousness and on attitudes to the outside world.

    The book presents students of British history with a panorama of the influences that have constructed national consciousness around a crucial moment in British history.

    Chapter 1 Introduction; Chapter 2 The projection of war, 1918 to 1939; Chapter 3 To Dunkirk; Chapter 4 Invasion and the Battle of Britain; Chapter 5 The Blitz; Chapter 6 Wartime politics and popular culture; Chapter 7 Refighting the war: Attlee to Blair; Chapter 8 America, Europe and the world; Chapter 9 Conclusion;

    Biography

    Malcolm Smith is Senior Lecturer and Chair of History at the University of Wales, Lampeter. He teaches in the field of War Studies and British popular culture and his previous publications include British Politics, Society and the State (Macmillan, 1990).

    This is a fascinating and well-written book, and a more than useful interpretative history of twentieth-century Britain. - Keith Laybourn, University of Huddersfield, Social History Society Bulletin, 2001

    'This is a welcome and thought-provoking approach to a well-worked subject.' - History, July 2002

    '... a very valuable and articulate contribution to our understanding of 1940.' - Stephen Brooke, Twentieth Century British History, February 2002