1920s Britain
By (Author) John Shepherd
By (author) Janet Shepherd
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Shire Publications
20th May 2012
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
941.083
88
Width 149mm, Height 210mm, Spine 10mm
228g
How does a society recover from a devastating war This was the question posed in the 1920s as people searched for normality in the aftermath of The Great War. Written from the perspective of those who lived, worked and played in London, 1920s Britain uncovers the hardships and stresses of the age, strains which manifested in the general strike of 1926. However, the 1920s was also a time of recovery and hope for the future; London itself was a place of international significance and hope. Delve into the past in this intriguing insight into a difficult time for Britain and the people tasked with its recovery.
Professor John Shepherd is the Co-Director of the Labour History Research Unit of the Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge. He has published widely on British Political and Labour History, including George Lansbury: At the Heart of Old Labour (OUP, 2002/2004) and Britains First Labour Government (Palgrave, 2006) (with Prof Laybourn). Currently, he is writing Crisis What Crisis The British Winter of discontent, 1978-79 for Manchester University Press.
Dr Janet Shepherd has over thirty years experience of teaching in schools and higher education. She gained her history doctorate with a study of Poor Law pauper education in Britain. She has written plays for Radio and was a contributor to an award winning history of her local village and village life published during the Millennium.