The Allied strategic bombing of Germany during World War II was a significant event in the history of Europe. Social representations of this event were investigated at the level of individual knowledge. To establish an index of British collective memory for this event, 169 adults (aged 18–87 years), divided into three generational groups, completed a questionnaire. The findings showed a disparity between subjective knowledge and historical actuality across all three age groups. A decline in understanding across time also suggests that a large degree of social, cultural and institutional forgetting has taken place since 1945 leading to misapprehension and widespread inability to comprehend the scale, intensity and destructiveness of the camp...
Following open-ended methodology used in an earlier research by Liu et al., social representations o...
Memories of the Second World War have been central to understandings of Britishness in the post-war ...
Historical memory, how a people remember the past, is in a state of almost eternal flux. By followin...
The notion of resilience, sustained throughout the bombing campaigns of WWII, notably the bravery an...
This thesis provides a survey of the English memory of the Second World War and Holocaust using oral...
This thesis provides a survey of the English memory of the Second World War and Holocaust using oral...
This thesis is a historiographical study concerning the strategic bombing campaign of Germany during...
Decades after the previously unimaginable horrors of the Nazi extermination camps and the dropping o...
Unlike those of most continental countries, Britain’s dominant memories of World War 2 are unified, ...
Germans’ hesitance to completely remember the Nazi past after 1945 is well documented. Yet there als...
This thesis compares the experiences of children who survived the Allied bombing of France during Wo...
The post-Cold War period has witnessed an upsurge in remembrance of the Second World War across the ...
This article uses the press coverage of the sensational 1946 trial of Neville Heath for murder as a ...
This paper uses (West) Germany as an exemplary case to analyse the formation of collective memories ...
This is a study of the relationship between Britain and the Holocaust from 1933 until today. Britai...
Following open-ended methodology used in an earlier research by Liu et al., social representations o...
Memories of the Second World War have been central to understandings of Britishness in the post-war ...
Historical memory, how a people remember the past, is in a state of almost eternal flux. By followin...
The notion of resilience, sustained throughout the bombing campaigns of WWII, notably the bravery an...
This thesis provides a survey of the English memory of the Second World War and Holocaust using oral...
This thesis provides a survey of the English memory of the Second World War and Holocaust using oral...
This thesis is a historiographical study concerning the strategic bombing campaign of Germany during...
Decades after the previously unimaginable horrors of the Nazi extermination camps and the dropping o...
Unlike those of most continental countries, Britain’s dominant memories of World War 2 are unified, ...
Germans’ hesitance to completely remember the Nazi past after 1945 is well documented. Yet there als...
This thesis compares the experiences of children who survived the Allied bombing of France during Wo...
The post-Cold War period has witnessed an upsurge in remembrance of the Second World War across the ...
This article uses the press coverage of the sensational 1946 trial of Neville Heath for murder as a ...
This paper uses (West) Germany as an exemplary case to analyse the formation of collective memories ...
This is a study of the relationship between Britain and the Holocaust from 1933 until today. Britai...
Following open-ended methodology used in an earlier research by Liu et al., social representations o...
Memories of the Second World War have been central to understandings of Britishness in the post-war ...
Historical memory, how a people remember the past, is in a state of almost eternal flux. By followin...