The Korean War In Britain: Citizenship, Selfhood And Forgetting Hardcover
Recommend
Sort by
Rating
Date
Specifications
Author 1
Grace Huxford
Book Description
The Korean War in Britain explores the social and cultural impact of the Korean War (1950-53) on Britain. Coming just five years after the ravages of the Second World War, Korea was a deeply unsettling moment in post-war British history. From allegations about American use of 'germ' warfare to anxiety over Communist use of 'brainwashing' and treachery at home, the Korean War precipitated a series of short-lived panics in 1950s Britain. But by the time of its uneasy ceasefire in 1953, the war was becoming increasingly forgotten. Using Mass Observation surveys, letters, diaries and a wide range of under-explored contemporary material, this book charts the war's changing position in British popular imagination and asks how it became known as the 'Forgotten War'. It explores the war in a variety of viewpoints - conscript, POW, protester and veteran - and is essential reading for anyone interested in Britain's Cold War past. -- .
ISBN-13
9781526118950
Language
English
Publisher
Manchester University Press
Publication Date
1 July 2018
Number of Pages
216
About the Author
Grace Huxford is Lecturer in British History at the University of Bristol -- .
Editorial Review
The book's greatest strength lies in the way in which it covers broad and challenging themes - identity, masculinity, popular opinion, citizenship, and memory, to name just a few - while never losing sight of the centrality of the war itself. It consistently knits together the larger discussions and grounds them firmly within the historical context of the early Cold War. In this way, the book makes a significant contribution to scholarship on this topic and goes some way to ensuring that the Korean War will not be forgotten.' Charlie Hall, University of Kent, Journal of Contemporary History Book Reviews, Vol. 54, Issue 3 -- .