Commemorations are about the present more than the past, as they reveal how different groups of people believed historical events should be understood within their own modern context. Both Margaret Thatcher in 1984 and John Major in 1994 were aware of the complicated political implications of British commemorations of D-Day. While Thatcher managed the potential international diplomatic traps that were thrust upon her in 1984, Major’s intentional efforts to use public festivities to boost domestic political support in1994 were far less successful
This article analyzes the broader context of the political conflict around the public memory of the ...
Sir John Major has the unfortunate distinction of being largely forgotten. That is not due to his ti...
International audienceHistory has impact, and historians have responsibilities to consider the impac...
Commemorations are about the present more than the past, as they reveal how different groups of peop...
In 1954, international dignitaries and veterans joined the commemoration of the Allied Landings on t...
The commemoration of the World Wars has frequently attracted controversy and widespread debate, reve...
Our issue, "Revisiting the Great War", appears just over six months after the centenary of the outbr...
This paper discusses the death and subsequent funeral of Margaret Thatcher through a critical interr...
From the British perspective, the 1982 Falklands war was waged for what the government and public de...
Assessing Margaret Thatcher’s premiership: a radical decade and a divisive legacy. When asked who ha...
In 1982, Britain and Argentina fought a war over the Falkland Islands, which had political and socia...
The funeral of Margaret Thatcher, the former British Prime Minister, is due to be held in London tod...
ABSTRACT. The firm attitude is what brought Margaret Thatcher the appellation of “Iron Lady”, for sh...
The author explains why, in his view, John Major has not received a fair hearing from historians. Th...
In the second half of the twentieth century concepts of memorialisation and commemoration were large...
This article analyzes the broader context of the political conflict around the public memory of the ...
Sir John Major has the unfortunate distinction of being largely forgotten. That is not due to his ti...
International audienceHistory has impact, and historians have responsibilities to consider the impac...
Commemorations are about the present more than the past, as they reveal how different groups of peop...
In 1954, international dignitaries and veterans joined the commemoration of the Allied Landings on t...
The commemoration of the World Wars has frequently attracted controversy and widespread debate, reve...
Our issue, "Revisiting the Great War", appears just over six months after the centenary of the outbr...
This paper discusses the death and subsequent funeral of Margaret Thatcher through a critical interr...
From the British perspective, the 1982 Falklands war was waged for what the government and public de...
Assessing Margaret Thatcher’s premiership: a radical decade and a divisive legacy. When asked who ha...
In 1982, Britain and Argentina fought a war over the Falkland Islands, which had political and socia...
The funeral of Margaret Thatcher, the former British Prime Minister, is due to be held in London tod...
ABSTRACT. The firm attitude is what brought Margaret Thatcher the appellation of “Iron Lady”, for sh...
The author explains why, in his view, John Major has not received a fair hearing from historians. Th...
In the second half of the twentieth century concepts of memorialisation and commemoration were large...
This article analyzes the broader context of the political conflict around the public memory of the ...
Sir John Major has the unfortunate distinction of being largely forgotten. That is not due to his ti...
International audienceHistory has impact, and historians have responsibilities to consider the impac...