There has been a welcome expansion in literature documenting aspects of the 1951 Festival of Britain since the publication of Becky Conekin’s The Autobiography of a Nation, a decade ago. Even though the Festival was a celebration of culture, work and production across the whole of the nation, most of the works published after the event, solely discuss, or at best emphasise what happened or was conceived in London. Even now, there are expressions of surprise that events happened elsewhere. This disconnect, was perceived at the time, by places outside the southern capital, with criticism being made about the Festivals London centric narrative of ‘Britishness’. Northern English cities recognised this ‘London and not London’ binary for the du...
Cities of the North takes an irreverent and often amusing look at the changing townscape, special ch...
In the late 1950s The Manchester Guardian demonstrated its national ambition by dropping Manchester ...
The dust-jackets of Iain Sinclair’s books are laden with endorsements describing him as the preemine...
A discussion of the types of events that the cities of York, Leeds, Manchester, Liverpool and Hull c...
This article takes a focussed look at how the Festival of Britain was marked outside the main events...
This paper investigates the ways in which the City of Liverpool Corporation, utilised their Arts Fes...
The Festival of Britain in 1951 transformed the way people saw their war-ravaged nation. Giving Brit...
The 1951 Festival of Britain was conceived in the immediate post-war period--a period of housing sho...
This social and cultural history focuses on the meanings of Britain and Britishness in the immediate...
Architectural nous: How York wrote their identity through architecture, during the 1951 Festival of ...
Late 20th century has marked the advent of a new metropolitan age: cities’ capacity, especially Wes...
In the early 1950s, British culture was dominated by welfare-state visions of urban reconstruction. ...
London has been peopled as much in the mind as in its streets. No city has been written about more. ...
This research was centred on a community cultural festival, which was staged in thecity of Derby (UK...
A critical overview of available research material for the scholar or interested reader on the 1951 ...
Cities of the North takes an irreverent and often amusing look at the changing townscape, special ch...
In the late 1950s The Manchester Guardian demonstrated its national ambition by dropping Manchester ...
The dust-jackets of Iain Sinclair’s books are laden with endorsements describing him as the preemine...
A discussion of the types of events that the cities of York, Leeds, Manchester, Liverpool and Hull c...
This article takes a focussed look at how the Festival of Britain was marked outside the main events...
This paper investigates the ways in which the City of Liverpool Corporation, utilised their Arts Fes...
The Festival of Britain in 1951 transformed the way people saw their war-ravaged nation. Giving Brit...
The 1951 Festival of Britain was conceived in the immediate post-war period--a period of housing sho...
This social and cultural history focuses on the meanings of Britain and Britishness in the immediate...
Architectural nous: How York wrote their identity through architecture, during the 1951 Festival of ...
Late 20th century has marked the advent of a new metropolitan age: cities’ capacity, especially Wes...
In the early 1950s, British culture was dominated by welfare-state visions of urban reconstruction. ...
London has been peopled as much in the mind as in its streets. No city has been written about more. ...
This research was centred on a community cultural festival, which was staged in thecity of Derby (UK...
A critical overview of available research material for the scholar or interested reader on the 1951 ...
Cities of the North takes an irreverent and often amusing look at the changing townscape, special ch...
In the late 1950s The Manchester Guardian demonstrated its national ambition by dropping Manchester ...
The dust-jackets of Iain Sinclair’s books are laden with endorsements describing him as the preemine...