The city of London was, during the years of 1940–1941, a city under fire. The metropolis seemed to have two faces, like the Roman deity Janus: the face of the daylight hours, so normal, and yet so deceiving in its false quietness – and at nightfall, the city turned, and the face of it was the face of the devil himself, transforming London into a living inferno. This thesis examines the sensescapes of the Blitz, through the diaries and memoirs written of that time. The primary sources consist of seven different diaries, two autobiographies, and four research volumes that contain multiple diary- and memoire entries, mostly from the Mass Observation Archives and from the Imperial War Museum. The sensory approach is a new orientation in th...
The Blitz Companion offers a unique overview of a century of aerial warfare, its impact on cities an...
This article re-considers the way that the British state extended its control of the home during the...
This paper addresses how the ten-year anniversary of the London bombings was made present through po...
Historians have often viewed the London blitz as a single uniform event that whilst the severity of ...
During the London Blitz – the German air campaign launched against the British capital between Septe...
In May 1940, Britain stood alone as the sole Western power engaged in battle with the German war mac...
Few historical images are more powerful than those of wartime London. Having survived a constant bar...
In a single night in December 1940, German bombs reduced more than a third of Britain’s most histori...
This introduction to the special issue on material cultures of reconstruction in post-war London hig...
In my thesis, I argue that there has been a trend in post-World War II British literature that posit...
The Great Fire is an iconic moment in the history of London. It took place in the context of the Res...
In the preface to the 1941 edition to his 1908 novel, The War in the Air, H. G. Wells wrote: ‘I told...
This thesis is basically about morale in Portsmouth, Southampton and Plymouth during the Second Wor...
Through an exploration of both past and present day reactions to the liberation of the Nazi concentr...
In February 2015, the seventieth anniversary of the bombing of Dresden (13-15 February 1945) was com...
The Blitz Companion offers a unique overview of a century of aerial warfare, its impact on cities an...
This article re-considers the way that the British state extended its control of the home during the...
This paper addresses how the ten-year anniversary of the London bombings was made present through po...
Historians have often viewed the London blitz as a single uniform event that whilst the severity of ...
During the London Blitz – the German air campaign launched against the British capital between Septe...
In May 1940, Britain stood alone as the sole Western power engaged in battle with the German war mac...
Few historical images are more powerful than those of wartime London. Having survived a constant bar...
In a single night in December 1940, German bombs reduced more than a third of Britain’s most histori...
This introduction to the special issue on material cultures of reconstruction in post-war London hig...
In my thesis, I argue that there has been a trend in post-World War II British literature that posit...
The Great Fire is an iconic moment in the history of London. It took place in the context of the Res...
In the preface to the 1941 edition to his 1908 novel, The War in the Air, H. G. Wells wrote: ‘I told...
This thesis is basically about morale in Portsmouth, Southampton and Plymouth during the Second Wor...
Through an exploration of both past and present day reactions to the liberation of the Nazi concentr...
In February 2015, the seventieth anniversary of the bombing of Dresden (13-15 February 1945) was com...
The Blitz Companion offers a unique overview of a century of aerial warfare, its impact on cities an...
This article re-considers the way that the British state extended its control of the home during the...
This paper addresses how the ten-year anniversary of the London bombings was made present through po...