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War and Social History: Britain and the Home Front during the Second World War

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 February 2010

Abstract

This article reviews interpretations of the history of British society during the Second World War. Traditionally the Second World War has been viewed as a period of outstanding national unity and social solidarity, and the social arrangements of wartime have been seen as a unique catalyst of administrative ‘collectivism’ and the growth of the ‘welfare state’. More recent historiography has presented a more diffuse picture, emphasising the elements of continuing diversity and conflict in British society during the war period, and the importance of more long-term social trends that were shared by all western European countries.

Cet article discute les interprétations de l'histoire de la société britannique durant la Seconde Guerre mondiale. La Seconde Guerre mondiale est traditionnellement considérée comme une période d'unité nationale et de solidarité sociale particulierement fortes. On attribue à l'organisation sociale prévalant pendant la guerre un rôle catalyseur dans le ‘collectivisme administratif’ et la croissance de l'‘Etat providence’. L'historiographie récente présente cependant une image plus contrastée. Elle souligne en particulier le caractère divers et conflictuel de la société britannique, qui se prolonge durant les années de guerre, ainsi que les tendances à long terme que l'on retrouve dans toutes les sociétés occidentales.

Dieser Beitrag beschäftigt sich mit den verschiedenen Interpretationen der Entwicklung der britischen Gesellschaft während des Zweiten Weltkriegs. Normalerweise wird diese Periode der britischen Geschichte als eine Periode ausserordentlicher nationaler Einigkeit angesehen. Die sozialen Intiativen der Kriegszeit werden als einen einzigartigen Anreiz zum ‘Verwaltungskollektivismus’ und zur Entwicklung des Wohlfahrtsstaates gewertet. Neulich ist die Geschichtsschreibung nuancierter geworden. Jetzt wird Elemente der Meinungsvielfalt und des Sozialkonfliktes stärker betont, wie auch die Wichtigkeit langfristiger sozialer Prozesse, die alle europäische Länder gemeinsam hatten.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1992

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References

1 Ernest Bevin, The Job to be Done (1942), 10.

2 Quoted in Hamilton Fyfe, Britain's Wartime Revolution (1944), 5.

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20 Lee, Machinery, 114, suggests that ‘suspension of regular elections to both the House of Commons and local authorities for the duration of the war may … have surprisingly done something to strengthen loyalties to traditional constitutional practice’.

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32 As demonstrated by innumerable cartoons of the period. See Andrew Sinclair, The War Decade. An Anthology of the 1940s (1989), 21. Thereafter Sinclair, War Decade.

33 Travis Crosby, The Impact of Civilian Evacuation in the Second World War (1986), passim; John Macnicol, ‘The Effect of the Evacuation of Schoolchildren on Official Attitudes to State Intervention’, in Smith, War and Social Change, 3–31.

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43 In, for example, the essay on war in Essays on the Welfare State, where Titmuss the subtle and finely nuanced social historian was less in evidence than Titmuss the didactic social theorist.

44 Cited in Sinclair, War Decade, 14.

45 Lawrie, ‘Impact’, passim; People in Production, parts C, D, and E; FR 1364, ‘Reconstruction, People's Hopes and Expectations’, July 1942, Mass Observation.

46 ‘A Review of Some Conclusions Arising out of a Year of Home Intelligence Reports’ by Stephen Taylor, Oct. 1941 PRO. INF 1/292; People in Production, 63–7, and passim.

47 Julian Symons, Notes from Another Country (1972), cited in Sinclair, War Decade, 76.

48 People in Production, 54–5, in the autumn of 1942 wrote about the ‘Dunkirk spirit’ nostalgically, as though it were an episode in a distant and irrecoverable past.

49 Cited in Sinclair, War Decade, 90–3.

50 Summerfield, Women Workers, passim.

51 Robert Currie, Alan Gilbert and Lee Horsley, Churches and Churchgoers. Patterns of Church Growth in the British Isles since 1700 (1977), 27, 30, 35–7, 62, 114–15. Mass Observation recorded a decrease in church-going but a ‘strengthening’ of faith, particularly in 1942 (FR 1200, Mass Observation Archive).

52 People in Production, 178–9.

53 Minutes of the Social Insurance Committee, March–Aug. 1942, PRO, CAB 87/ 76–8.

54 ‘Certain things go inevitably with war and are war’, commented an anonymous member of the Mass Observation team in April 1940. ‘The main thing is fighting, winning, killing and being killed, being masculine and aggressive and abnormally vigorous, violent and physical.’ FR 89, ‘Morale Now’,30 Apr. 1940, Mass Observation Archive.

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