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en-bs J GARDINER : FROM THE BOMB TO THE BEATLES

28-01-2012, 6:02
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Cena kup teraz: 18 zł     
Użytkownik engbooks1
numer aukcji: 2047250602
Miejscowość Poznań
Wyświetleń: 9   
Koniec: 28-01-2012 06:02:33

Dodatkowe informacje:
Stan: Używany
Okładka: twarda
Rok wydania (xxxx): 1999
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JULIET GARDINER


FROM THE BOMB TO THE BEATLES

DANE TECHNICZNE (Q4)
oprawa: twarda; duzy format, kredowy papier, zdjecia
liczba stron: 160
stan:
bardzo dobry -



OPIS KSIĄŻKI:
Every generation likes to think that it is THE generation--the one that has so finely synthesised all that has gone before that it is impossible to imagine anything finer. But as this book From the Bomb to the Beatles, published to coincide with an exhibition at London's Imperial War Museum, so vividly demonstrates nothing dates as quickly as cultural taste. Tony Blair may have thought he was the figurehead of a new political era as New Labour swept to power in 1997, but it's almost inevitable that in 30 years time the lingering memory most of us will have of Cool Britannia is a few laughable fashion accessories.

Indeed such is the pace of change in the 20th century that the Britain at the beginning of this book is scarcely recognisable as the same country as the one that emerged 20 years later. When the two atomic bombs were exploded over Hiroshima and Nagasaki to bring the Second World War to an abrupt and murderous full-stop, Britain was a country on its knees. It may have won the war but the effects--economic, social and psychological--almost guaranteed that it was going to lose any peace. Much as Britain wanted to retain a global primacy, its war-shattered population just didn't have the energy. Rationing was in place, times were still austere and most people just wanted to be left alone to rebuild their fractured lives. Small wonder then, that it was left to the US and the USSR to dominate the post-war landscape.

Published in order to accompany an exhibition of the same name at the Imperial War Museum, this book focuses on the cultural and social developments in Britain in the twenty years following the Second World War'