Stapleton, J. (2005) 'Sir Arthur Bryant and national history in twentieth-century Britain.', Lanham, Md.: Lexington Books.
Abstract
The following text is taken from the publisher's website: "Sir Arthur Bryant and National History in Twentieth-Century Britain is a significant new study of the work of the popular historian and journalist, Sir Arthur Bryant (1899-1985). Since his death, scholarly interest in Bryant has focused on his Nazi sympathies in the late 1930s. Julia Stapleton broadens our understanding of the man and the writer. Stapleton illuminates Bryant's romantic ideal of his nation. She explores the historian's success in writing for a broad middlebrow audience, aided by his firsthand experience of two world wars; and she traces the decline of Bryant's authority beginning in the 1960s as the discipline of history diversified and new ties were forged between professional historians and popular readerships. Stapleton suggests that Bryant prefigured and sustained a form of nationalism that remained nascent within the British population (though not always its elites) deep into the twentieth century, as the Falklands episode and the recent resurgence of English national identity well illustrates. Twenty years after his death, when history has scaled new heights of popularity, a study of the historian whose work made perhaps the largest public impact in twentieth-century Britain could not be more timely."
Item Type: | Book |
---|---|
Keywords: | Historian, Journalist, Political Commentator, Nationalism. |
Full text: | Full text not available from this repository. |
Publisher Web site: | https://rowman.com/ISBN/978-0-7391-1798-9 |
Date accepted: | No date available |
Date deposited: | No date available |
Date of first online publication: | 2005 |
Date first made open access: | No date available |
Save or Share this output
Export: | |
Look up in GoogleScholar |