Thesis

Voices of the Cold War in Britain, 1945 - 1962

Creator
Rights statement
Awarding institution
  • University of Strathclyde
Date of award
  • 2018
Thesis identifier
  • T14943
Person Identifier (Local)
  • 201452582
Qualification Level
Qualification Name
Department, School or Faculty
Abstract
  • This thesis investigates the civilian experience of the Cold War between 1945 and1962 through 44 original oral history interviews with 48 individuals. As the first oral history of everyday life in Cold War Britain it examines the generation born before1945 and the experience of growing up in postwar Britain. The thesis situates these oral histories within the changing emotional landscape that contextualised Britain's Cold War, comparing and contrasting experiences through cultural and documentary sources, as well as oral testimony. This combination of sources and methodologies offers a fresh perspective on two civilian communities that were integral to Britain's early nuclear weapons developments: civil defence recruits and anti-nuclear campaigners. It is also the first study of its kind to compare these group experiences with those of a general cohort of civilian interviewees. An emotions history approach is central to the argument that personal experiences of Second World War memory, gender norms, and the media, coupled with unprecedented technological and cultural postwar developments, contributed to perceptions of nuclear security and Britain's role in Cold War foreign policy. While many individuals responded differently to the Cold War in this period, the thesis shows that such actions were often anchored in similar motivations. The thesis argues that the conditions of postwar emotional cultures underpinned individual and collective perspectives on Britain's role in the Cold War, revealing how the logic of Cold War military strategies and power structures affected and were absorbed by civilians indirectly implicated in a peacetime conflict. As such, this thesis contributes directly to current scholarship on the cultural, social and political history of Cold War Britain.
Advisor / supervisor
  • McIvor, Arthur
  • Newlands, Emma
Resource Type
DOI
Date Created
  • 2018
Former identifier
  • 9912621388502996
Embargo Note
  • The electronic version of this thesis is currently under moratorium due to copyright restrictions. If you are the author of this thesis, please contact the Library to resolve this issue.

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