In interviews with members of Britain’s Civil Defence Services, experiences of Cold War voluntarism are recalled in a variety of ways. Some remembered their desire to help defend their nation and local community. Others remembered making a leisure choice that had little connection to the potential nuclear war the organisation was ostensibly preparing for. No one provided a well-developed account of civil defence’s ability to provide a defence against the effects of a nuclear war. Popular memory theorists have argued that the impact of cultural discourse limits the ability of individuals to narrate stories that do not align with cultural and socially valued frameworks. In this case, dominant cultural understandings of civil defence as at bes...
This article examines British popular and media reactions to America's Bravo test shot in April 1954...
This open access edited collection brings together established and new perspectives on Cold War civi...
This chapter examines the theory of popular memory proposed by the Popular Memory Group at the Birmi...
Between 1948 and 1968, Civil Defence Corps recruits trained to protect local communities in the even...
This thesis investigates the emotional and social experiences of British civilians in the Cold War e...
In the early cold war, the British government founded a voluntary civil defence service designed to ...
This thesis explores the experiences of British servicemen who served at nuclear testing sites in th...
This essay tackles the question of what international politics in general and the Cold War in partic...
This book has two major objectives. First, it sets out to chart in detail the British experience wit...
Based on a detailed analysis of archives and high level interviews this book looks at the role of be...
PhDThis thesis investigates how successive postwar British Governments formulated a civil defence ...
Memories of the Second World War have been central to understandings of Britishness in the post-war ...
This article examines British popular and media reactions to America’s Bravo test shot in April 1954...
Civil defence was an integral part of Britain's modern history. Throughout the cold war it was a cen...
This article explores British 'nuclear culture' by examining how individuals and groups within Briti...
This article examines British popular and media reactions to America's Bravo test shot in April 1954...
This open access edited collection brings together established and new perspectives on Cold War civi...
This chapter examines the theory of popular memory proposed by the Popular Memory Group at the Birmi...
Between 1948 and 1968, Civil Defence Corps recruits trained to protect local communities in the even...
This thesis investigates the emotional and social experiences of British civilians in the Cold War e...
In the early cold war, the British government founded a voluntary civil defence service designed to ...
This thesis explores the experiences of British servicemen who served at nuclear testing sites in th...
This essay tackles the question of what international politics in general and the Cold War in partic...
This book has two major objectives. First, it sets out to chart in detail the British experience wit...
Based on a detailed analysis of archives and high level interviews this book looks at the role of be...
PhDThis thesis investigates how successive postwar British Governments formulated a civil defence ...
Memories of the Second World War have been central to understandings of Britishness in the post-war ...
This article examines British popular and media reactions to America’s Bravo test shot in April 1954...
Civil defence was an integral part of Britain's modern history. Throughout the cold war it was a cen...
This article explores British 'nuclear culture' by examining how individuals and groups within Briti...
This article examines British popular and media reactions to America's Bravo test shot in April 1954...
This open access edited collection brings together established and new perspectives on Cold War civi...
This chapter examines the theory of popular memory proposed by the Popular Memory Group at the Birmi...