Preface
1: Introduction
2: Nella Last: nation before husband
3: Gertrude Glover: moral guardian
4: Mary Clayton: bombed out and keeping going
5: Eleanor Humphries: serving genius
6: Lillian Rogers: Birmingham flaneuse
7: Ernest van Someren: the good life
8: Denis Argent: between the acts
9: The Waltons: a democratic marriage
10: Conclusion
Endnotes
Bibliography
Index
Preface; 1. Introduction; 2. Nella Last: nation before husband; 3. Gertrude Glover: moral guardian; 4. Mary Clayton: bombed out and keeping going; 5. Eleanor Humphries: serving genius; 6. Lillian Rogers: Birmingham flaneuse; 7. Ernest van Someren: the good life; 8. Denis Argent: between the acts; 9. The Waltons: a democratic marriage; 10. Conclusion; Endnotes; Bibliography; Index
James Hinton has published widely on the social history of
twentieth-century Britain. His early work in labour history
included The First Shop Stewards' Movement (1973) and Labour and
Socialism (1983). A spell of intense political activism in the
1980s anti-nuclear movement was reflected in Protests and Visions:
Peace Politics in Twentieth-Century Britain (1989). More recently
he has published monographs on two contrasting groups of
active citizens during the second world war: Shop Floor Citizens
(1994), and Women and Social Leadership (2002). Following his work
on the Mass Observation diaries, he is now engaged on a full-scale
history of Mass Observation.
`Review from previous edition [A] welcome, scholarly and
illuminating installment in the story without end of the "People's
War"'
Juliet Gardiner, Financial Times
`The life stories are moving and beautifully described.'
Vernon Bogdanor, New Statesman
`A compelling account that presents much that is unexpected about
the lived experience of the war. Hinton is to be congratulated on
demonstrating the value of a welcome and overdue 'biographical
turn' in historical studies.'
Penny Summerfield, BBC History Magazine
`Elegantly written and subtle in its analysis, this book will offer
much to those interested in the social history of the war, those
new to using personal sources, and more generally to those
interested in existential questions about life.'
Hester Vaizey, Times Higher Education
`[An] absorbing and sophisticated exploration of how the public
demands of war intruded into the provate sphere and moulded new
identities.'
Literary Review
`Skilfully synthesising a dense conceptual literature on themes of
modernity, identity and the self, Hinton makes a powerful case for
the value of diary-writing to the historian...an immensely
enjoyable read.'
Review in History
`An absorbing volume packed with illuminating detail and convincing
analysis.'
Sue Bruley, History Today
`Hintons book is a valuable resource not just for students of
mid-century Britain but for anyone interested in the puzzle of
modern democratic selfhood.'
Alan Allport, Twentieth Century British History
`This is a beautifully written and often moving book; a
contribution to both the historiography of the war years and a
thoughtful meditation on the construction of selfhood.'
Lucy Noakes, English Historical Review
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