The article examines the cultural importance of the ‘Cambridge spies’, the infamous traitors who betrayed British secrets to the Soviets over a period of several decades. In particular, it looks at the various ‘screen fictions’ which have drew inspiration from the well-known tale of treachery, and argues the centrality of the Cambridge spies as a Cold War narrative in British culture in the second part of the twentieth century. Aspects of the story has figured in such screen dramas as Traitor (1971), Philby, Burgess and Maclean (1977), Another Country (1984), and The Cambridge Spies (2003), while this article pays particular attention to the classic BBC adaptation of John le Carré’s Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (1979), and the screen versio...
In 1943, Ormond Uren, an army officer employed in the London headquarters of Britain’s Special Opera...
While there is a considerable literature that considers post-1945 British intelligencehistoriography...
Relations between the post-war Labour Government and Britain's Security Service (MI5) have often bee...
This article focuses on the representation of the spy Guy Burgess, one of the famous Cambridge ring,...
This article explores the connections and distinctions between cinema and TV, and between the screen...
The genre of spy fiction confronts a paradigm-shifting event in the 1990s with the end of the Cold W...
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)This thesis examines dramatic treatments of the liv...
Although biopics are still widely held in critical disdain, a number of new stimulating pers...
This article examines two adaptations of John le Carré’s 1974 novel Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, th...
During the cold war, the British entertainment industry escaped the extent of the anti-communist sen...
This thesis examines the representation of the Central Intelligence Agency and its predecessor the O...
Spies have been featured in fiction for centuries. As the spy fiction genre developed and spying bec...
The article analyzes spy films as examples of alienation within modern office life. It shows how int...
This research paper was completed and submitted at Nipissing University, and is made freely accessib...
On the afternoon of 16 February 1963 four men set out from London for an area of countryside just ou...
In 1943, Ormond Uren, an army officer employed in the London headquarters of Britain’s Special Opera...
While there is a considerable literature that considers post-1945 British intelligencehistoriography...
Relations between the post-war Labour Government and Britain's Security Service (MI5) have often bee...
This article focuses on the representation of the spy Guy Burgess, one of the famous Cambridge ring,...
This article explores the connections and distinctions between cinema and TV, and between the screen...
The genre of spy fiction confronts a paradigm-shifting event in the 1990s with the end of the Cold W...
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)This thesis examines dramatic treatments of the liv...
Although biopics are still widely held in critical disdain, a number of new stimulating pers...
This article examines two adaptations of John le Carré’s 1974 novel Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, th...
During the cold war, the British entertainment industry escaped the extent of the anti-communist sen...
This thesis examines the representation of the Central Intelligence Agency and its predecessor the O...
Spies have been featured in fiction for centuries. As the spy fiction genre developed and spying bec...
The article analyzes spy films as examples of alienation within modern office life. It shows how int...
This research paper was completed and submitted at Nipissing University, and is made freely accessib...
On the afternoon of 16 February 1963 four men set out from London for an area of countryside just ou...
In 1943, Ormond Uren, an army officer employed in the London headquarters of Britain’s Special Opera...
While there is a considerable literature that considers post-1945 British intelligencehistoriography...
Relations between the post-war Labour Government and Britain's Security Service (MI5) have often bee...