<i>The People's Victory</i> is an intimate, and profoundly moving, encounter with ordinary lives in a moment of extraordinary change. Drawing on the unparalleled riches of the UK's Mass Observation Archive, it shows us that wartime people were complex, surprising and thoughtful - in fact people quite like us. The book is authoritative, enlightening, and narratively gripping, as it takes us on a journey through the last days of war in the company of those who lived through it.

Professor Claire Langhamer, Director of the Institute of Historical Research

This <b>remarkable </b>book delves into perhaps the most meaningful day in 20th-century British history. Although <b>redolent with the scent of bonfires and patterned with the crisscross of bunting</b>, <i>The People's Victory </i>does far more than just paint a picture of VE Day; it <b>captures the emotional complexity of a moment that was both an end and a beginning</b>, and draws on the wealth of material in the Mass Observation archive to understand how the nation was truly feeling.

Becky Brown, editor of Blitz Spirit

Drawing on the fabulous Mass Observation Archive, <b>Noakes has written an entirely new social history of the Second World War.</b> <i>The People's Victory</i> is <b>a moving and engaging account of ordinary people's everyday experiences, and responses to, one of the most significant moments in twentieth-century British history.</b> It is a <b>compelling </b>read.

Professor Emerita Penny Summerfield

Se alle

<b>Ambitious in its span and nuanced in its analysis, <i>The People's Victory</i> offers a compelling portrait of a nation at war. </b>Lucy Noakes has rescued from relative obscurity a rich and complex archive, one that lends insight into the hopes, dreams and fears of an embattled generation. <b>This book is a <i>tour de force</i> and a major contribution to the way we remember war. </b>

Bruce Scates, Professor of History, Australian National University

<b>Lucy Noakes's fascinating chronicle of VE Day, 8 May 1945, draws on the hundreds of contemporary accounts in the Mass Observation archive to create a vivid picture of the hopes, fears, and excitement of ordinary people across Britain at the moment the war in Europe ended.</b>

Professor Alan Allport, award-winning author of Britain at Bay

'The VE Day book' Amol Rajan, Today, Radio 4

'Although redolent with the scent of bonfires and patterned with the crisscross of bunting, The People's Victory does far more than just paint a picture of VE Day; it captures the emotional complexity of a moment that was both an end and a beginning' Becky Brown, editor of Blitz Spirit

IN 1937, Charles Madge and Tom Harrisson created the social survey organisation Mass Observation to capture the thoughts, feelings and minutiae of individuals across the British Isles. At its height Mass Observation had 1,000 concurrent writers - stretching from Penzance to Aberdeen and including miners, academics and housewives - and collected over 1 million individual diary entries between 1937 and 1960.

In The People's Victory, historian Lucy Noakes mines the Mass Observation archive to present a groundbreaking history of how Britons at home celebrated and experienced the end of World War II. Alongside street celebrations and tea parties, we find bonfires and bell ringing, water fights and wagon rides, solitary and shared walks - and copious amounts of alcohol. However, as Noakes also reveals, not everyone felt like celebrating that May: many were still waiting for news of family members who had vanished in the fog of war, whilst thousands of British soldiers were still interned in the Far East.

By centring the voices, feelings and fears of the public at the heart of the People's War, Noakes also traces the hopes and changing attitudes of a nation in flux, revealing how the camaraderie and selflessness of wartime led to the birth of the welfare state.

Les mer
A brand-new social history of how Britons felt about and celebrated VE Day, utilising the rich Mass Observation archives - published to coincide with the 80th anniversary of VE Day in 2025.
Map: Geographical Distribution of Wartime Mass Observation Diarists Prologue: 'An Anthropology of Our Own People' Chapter One: The Second World War in British Myth and Memory - 'I Had a Pretty Quiet War Really' Chapter Two: Mass Observation and the Second World War - 'They Speak for Themselves' Chapter Three: Mass Observers at War - 'War Begins at Home' Chapter Four: 1-6 May 1945 - 'A Week of Confusion and Fluctuating Emotions' Prologue - 7 May 1945: The Funeral of Germany Chapter Five: Daytime, Monday 7 May - 'The Most Unsettling Day of All' Chapter Six: Evening, Monday 7 May - 'I Still Rejoiced with All My Heart' Prologue - 8 May 1945: An End and a Beginning Chapter Seven: Daytime, Tuesday 8 May - 'So, This Is V Day' Chapter Eight: Evening, Tuesday 8 May - 'This Is Your Victory' Afterword: 'It Is All Very Difficult to Imagine We Have Peace'
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781838955120
Publisert
2025-05-01
Utgiver
Atlantic Books
Vekt
1 gr
Høyde
244 mm
Bredde
164 mm
Dybde
32 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
352

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Lucy Noakes is the Rab Butler Professor of Modern History at the University of Essex, a Trustee of the Mass Observation Archive and the current President of the Royal Historical Society. She is a historian of twentieth-century Britain and an expert on the social and cultural history of the Second World War. Her publications include three single authored books - War and the British: National Identity and the Second World War, Women and the British Army 1907-1948 and Dying for the Nation: Death, Grief and Bereavement in Second World War Britain - and three edited collections.