" Few historical images are more powerful than those of wartime
London. Having survived a constant barrage of German bombs, the
city is remembered as an island of courage and defiance. These
wartime images are still in use today to support a wide variety of
political viewpoints. But how well do such descriptions match the
memories of those who survived the blitz? Jean Freedman interviewed
more than fifty people who remember London during the war, focusing
on under-represented groups, including women, Jews, and
working-class citizens. In addition she examined original
propaganda, secret government documents, wartime diaries, and
postwar memoirs. Of particular significance to Freedman were the
contemporary music, theater, film, speeches, and radio drama used
by the British government to shape public opinion and impart
political messages. Such bits of everyday life are mentioned in
virtually every civilian's experience of wartime London but their
interpretations of them often clashed with their government's
intentions. By exploring the differences between wartime
documentation and postwar memory, oral and written artifacts, and
the voices of the powerful and the obscure, Freedman illuminates
the complex interactions between myth and history. She concludes
that there are as many interpretations of what really happened
during Britain's finest hour as there are people who remember
it.
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