The romance of decline: the historiography of appeasement and British national identity
It is intended to advance a strong reading of the opening assertion, and to suggest that changing - and
competing - conceptions of British national identity have been crucial in the evolution of interpretations of appeasement. On the one hand, shifting
perspectives on national identity have critically shaped academic engagement with the subject. On the other hand - though here the claim is somewhat less
strong - this writing has helped to disseminate particular conceptions of national identity in the wider social world. This is not to deny that it is still
legitimate to regard this historiography in conventional terms as a discourse about some discrete events in the 1930s as refracted through the extant
documentary traces. However, the aim
here is to foreground some of the rather more subjective aspects of historians' engagement with appeasement. Whatever the merits of traditional
perspectives on the historiography of appeasement, it is at least as interesting and valid to think of it as a discourse about British national identity in the
present as well as the past.
Item Type | Article |
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Keywords | appeasement, historiography, World War II |
Subjects | History |
Divisions | Institute of Historical Research |
Date Deposited | 30 Jan 2012 10:16 |
Last Modified | 05 Aug 2024 19:29 |
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picture_as_pdf - Journal_of_International_History_2000-06_Finney.pdf
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subject - Published Version