Fr. 69.00

The Politics of Crisis - An Interpretation of British Politics, 1931-1945

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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The Politics of Crisis is an interpretation of the most dramatic periods of modern British political history - the decade and a half between 1931 and 1945. Formed to sustain the British economy in the midst of the Great Depression, the National Governments of the 1930s achieved this and more, and electoral popularity unmatched since. Yet the conventional wisdom about those Governments is full of the unemployment that they inherited, as it is of the image of Neville Chamberlain trying and failing to buy peace from Hitler at Munich. For then comes the Second World War and Winston Churchill and victory of a kind for Britain, and a curious form of domestic politics that, with peace restored, witnesses the victor turned out of office. The Politics of Crisis clinically assesses the evidence and these events and provides a challenging and new interpretation of them.

List of contents

Dedication Preface The Ghosts in the Machine The Devil's Decade: Party Politics in the Era of the National Government 1931-1940 Waiting for a Miracle to Happen?: The Economic and Social Policies of the National Governments 1931-1940 The Guilty Men Amidst the Gathering Storm: The Defence and Foreign Policies of the National Governments 1931-1940 War With Honour: Churchill and the British Conduct of the Second World War 1940-1945 Goodbye To All That: British Domestic Politics during the Second World War 1940-1945 References Bibliography Index

About the author

GEOFFREY FRY has been Professor of British Government and Administration at the University of Leeds since 1993. He has written six previous books including Statesmen in Disguise, which established itself as the standard history of the British Higher Civil Service, and other important works of academic scholarship analysing the history and development of British public policy and administration.

Summary

The Politics of Crisis is an interpretation of the most dramatic periods of modern British political history - the decade and a half between 1931 and 1945. Formed to sustain the British economy in the midst of the Great Depression, the National Governments of the 1930s achieved this and more, and electoral popularity unmatched since. Yet the conventional wisdom about those Governments is full of the unemployment that they inherited, as it is of the image of Neville Chamberlain trying and failing to buy peace from Hitler at Munich. For then comes the Second World War and Winston Churchill and victory of a kind for Britain, and a curious form of domestic politics that, with peace restored, witnesses the victor turned out of office. The Politics of Crisis clinically assesses the evidence and these events and provides a challenging and new interpretation of them.

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'...this book is a valuable review of the historical literature on the subject.' - Choice

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'...this book is a valuable review of the historical literature on the subject.' - Choice

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