This article examines British popular and media reactions to America’s Bravo test shot in April 1954 and Coventry City Council’s subsequent decision to abandon Civil Defence. The article finds three key motifs emerged which relate to Britain’s broader sense of national identity in the 1950s. First, the controversy formed part of a cultural battle for national identity between a conservative and potentially militaristic culture, and one which was more progressive and opposed war and nuclear armaments. Second, opponents labelled the councillors as Moscow stooges and this revealed underlying anti-communism. Third, reactions engaged with a secular strain of Cold War apocalypticism
This article discusses key aspects of the symbolic politics of the British and West German anti-nucl...
The British fear of bombing in the early twentieth century has aptly been termed ‘the shadow of the ...
PhDThis thesis investigates how successive postwar British Governments formulated a civil defence ...
This article examines British popular and media reactions to America’s Bravo test shot in April 1954...
This article examines British popular and media reactions to America's Bravo test shot in April 1954...
This article is concerned with different factions within the British peace movement during the 1950s...
The main subject of this thesis is Britain’s independent nuclear deterrent between the years 1957 an...
This article is concerned with different factions within the British peace movement during the 1950s...
In the early cold war, the British government founded a voluntary civil defence service designed to ...
This article explores British 'nuclear culture' by examining how individuals and groups within Briti...
Long understood as the key document in Britain's Cold War history, the Duncan Sandys Defence White P...
This article uses the Scottish and Welsh Councils for Nuclear Disarmament as windows into the relati...
The article discusses the reasons for the decline of the atom bomb and nuclear warfare as a public i...
Review of Britain and the Bomb: Nuclear Diplomacy, 1964- 1970 by David James Gill
This essay tackles the question of what international politics in general and the Cold War in partic...
This article discusses key aspects of the symbolic politics of the British and West German anti-nucl...
The British fear of bombing in the early twentieth century has aptly been termed ‘the shadow of the ...
PhDThis thesis investigates how successive postwar British Governments formulated a civil defence ...
This article examines British popular and media reactions to America’s Bravo test shot in April 1954...
This article examines British popular and media reactions to America's Bravo test shot in April 1954...
This article is concerned with different factions within the British peace movement during the 1950s...
The main subject of this thesis is Britain’s independent nuclear deterrent between the years 1957 an...
This article is concerned with different factions within the British peace movement during the 1950s...
In the early cold war, the British government founded a voluntary civil defence service designed to ...
This article explores British 'nuclear culture' by examining how individuals and groups within Briti...
Long understood as the key document in Britain's Cold War history, the Duncan Sandys Defence White P...
This article uses the Scottish and Welsh Councils for Nuclear Disarmament as windows into the relati...
The article discusses the reasons for the decline of the atom bomb and nuclear warfare as a public i...
Review of Britain and the Bomb: Nuclear Diplomacy, 1964- 1970 by David James Gill
This essay tackles the question of what international politics in general and the Cold War in partic...
This article discusses key aspects of the symbolic politics of the British and West German anti-nucl...
The British fear of bombing in the early twentieth century has aptly been termed ‘the shadow of the ...
PhDThis thesis investigates how successive postwar British Governments formulated a civil defence ...