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Cold War Culture - Intellectuals, the Media and the Practice of History (Hardcover)
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Cold War Culture - Intellectuals, the Media and the Practice of History (Hardcover)
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Britain in the 1950s had a distinctive political and intellectual
climate. It was the age of Keynesianism, of welfare state
consensus, incipient consumerism, and, to its detractors - the
so-called 'Angry Young Men' and the emergent New Left - a new age
of complacency. While Prime Minister Harold Macmillan famously
remarked that 'most of our people have never had it so good', the
playwright John Osborne lamented that 'there aren't any good, brave
causes left'.Philosophers, political scientists, economists and
historians embraced the supposed 'end of ideology' and fetishized
'value-free' technique and analysis. This turn is best understood
in the context of the cultural Cold War in which 'ideology' served
as shorthand for Marxist, but it also drew on the rich resources
and traditions of English empiricism and a Burkean scepticism about
abstract theory in general. Ironically, cultural critics and
historians such as Raymond Williams and E.P. Thompson showed at
this time that the thick catalogue of English moral, aesthetic and
social critique could also be put to altogether different purposes.
Jim Smyth here shows that, despite being allergic to McCarthy-style
vulgarity, British intellectuals in the 1950s operated within
powerful Cold War paradigms all the same.
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