This article examines reactions in Great Britain to the executions of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg in June 1953. Through an assessment of the papers of the British National Rosenberg Defence Committee and other archival sources, it challenges the view that British responses were characterised by anti-Americanism. It suggests that the protest movement was heterogeneous, motivated by various concerns and even had significant intellectual and political links with the US. Moreover, the bipolar international system of the early Cold War and desire not to jeopardise the nascent Anglo-American relationship prevented the growth of a more popular movement. This research adds to work on perceptions of the US in the political culture of post-war Britain
In 1918 anglophobia, which for most of the 19th century had been a standard feature of the cultural ...
This article analyses British policy towards Iraq during the period following the Second World War u...
This is a study of the relationship between Britain and the Holocaust from 1933 until today. Britai...
The subject of this research is British 'anti-Americanism' in the decade after 1945: a complex pheno...
Since the end of the Cold War, the question of British attitudes towards the United States of Americ...
The dominant political dynamic in the United States during the late 1940s and early 1950s was a para...
This article contributes to the scholarly literature on Anglo-American relations in the 1960s by inv...
The subject of this research is British 'anti-Americanism' in the decade after 1945: a complex phen...
In this chapter I focus on the image of the United States held by mass publics in Western Europe dur...
This thesis explores the anti-Vietnam War activism of US citizens and serving members of the US mili...
In the study of Allied responses to the Holocaust there has been little detailed comparative work. T...
In the Cold War battle for hearts and minds Britain was the first country to formulate a coordinated...
This article compares the ways in which Cold War culture in general and ‘nuclear culture’ in particu...
Today, while the United States plunges through its third year of war against totalitarian aggression...
Ethel and Julius Rosenberg were arrested at a time when the domestic political scene of the United S...
In 1918 anglophobia, which for most of the 19th century had been a standard feature of the cultural ...
This article analyses British policy towards Iraq during the period following the Second World War u...
This is a study of the relationship between Britain and the Holocaust from 1933 until today. Britai...
The subject of this research is British 'anti-Americanism' in the decade after 1945: a complex pheno...
Since the end of the Cold War, the question of British attitudes towards the United States of Americ...
The dominant political dynamic in the United States during the late 1940s and early 1950s was a para...
This article contributes to the scholarly literature on Anglo-American relations in the 1960s by inv...
The subject of this research is British 'anti-Americanism' in the decade after 1945: a complex phen...
In this chapter I focus on the image of the United States held by mass publics in Western Europe dur...
This thesis explores the anti-Vietnam War activism of US citizens and serving members of the US mili...
In the study of Allied responses to the Holocaust there has been little detailed comparative work. T...
In the Cold War battle for hearts and minds Britain was the first country to formulate a coordinated...
This article compares the ways in which Cold War culture in general and ‘nuclear culture’ in particu...
Today, while the United States plunges through its third year of war against totalitarian aggression...
Ethel and Julius Rosenberg were arrested at a time when the domestic political scene of the United S...
In 1918 anglophobia, which for most of the 19th century had been a standard feature of the cultural ...
This article analyses British policy towards Iraq during the period following the Second World War u...
This is a study of the relationship between Britain and the Holocaust from 1933 until today. Britai...