The Stately Pleasure Dome, the state sponsored national exhibition, offers a moment at which a sense of national identity is publicly declared and presented as cause for national celebration. This paper charts the shifts in the mechanisms for funding, the framing of the 'British people', industry and the role of the monarch at three distinct historical moments. In case studies of the Great Exhibition, the Festival of Britain and the Millennium Experience, the paper assesses how each exhibition conceived the leisure experience of a good day out. The paper suggests that while each exhibition claimed historical continuity, the constructions of the British people, the monarchy and the nation change. The different modes of funding and the public...
The Festival of Britain in 1951 transformed the way people saw their war-ravaged nation. Giving Brit...
This collection reflects on the ways in which historically and trans-culturally collections have bee...
During the mid-eighteenth century two museum institutions the British Museum and the Royal Academy o...
This social and cultural history focuses on the meanings of Britain and Britishness in the immediate...
Placed in the specific context of contemporary historical debates about the construction of memory a...
The grand exhibitions of the Victorian and Edwardian eras are the lens through which Peter Hoffenber...
The 1951 Festival of Britain was conceived in the immediate post-war period--a period of housing sho...
Placed in the specific context of contemporary historical debates about the construction of memory a...
Although the study of national identity in social psychology has examined the various ways in which ...
This chapter appears in a journal published by the Twentieth Century Society to mark the fiftieth an...
In the twenty-first century Hampton Court Palace is widely recognised as one of the UK's top histori...
The aim of this paper is to provide a closer insight into the importance of The Great Exhibition con...
This thesis examines the British Empire Exhibition (1924/25), the first example of intra-empire exhi...
National exhibitions have been produced roughly 150 years, since the birth of the European nation st...
Leisure is in the vanguard of a social and cultural revolution which is replacing the former East/We...
The Festival of Britain in 1951 transformed the way people saw their war-ravaged nation. Giving Brit...
This collection reflects on the ways in which historically and trans-culturally collections have bee...
During the mid-eighteenth century two museum institutions the British Museum and the Royal Academy o...
This social and cultural history focuses on the meanings of Britain and Britishness in the immediate...
Placed in the specific context of contemporary historical debates about the construction of memory a...
The grand exhibitions of the Victorian and Edwardian eras are the lens through which Peter Hoffenber...
The 1951 Festival of Britain was conceived in the immediate post-war period--a period of housing sho...
Placed in the specific context of contemporary historical debates about the construction of memory a...
Although the study of national identity in social psychology has examined the various ways in which ...
This chapter appears in a journal published by the Twentieth Century Society to mark the fiftieth an...
In the twenty-first century Hampton Court Palace is widely recognised as one of the UK's top histori...
The aim of this paper is to provide a closer insight into the importance of The Great Exhibition con...
This thesis examines the British Empire Exhibition (1924/25), the first example of intra-empire exhi...
National exhibitions have been produced roughly 150 years, since the birth of the European nation st...
Leisure is in the vanguard of a social and cultural revolution which is replacing the former East/We...
The Festival of Britain in 1951 transformed the way people saw their war-ravaged nation. Giving Brit...
This collection reflects on the ways in which historically and trans-culturally collections have bee...
During the mid-eighteenth century two museum institutions the British Museum and the Royal Academy o...