Rule Britannia to Cool Britannia : Britain in the Twentieth Century

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History 564, Spring 2009 Instructor: Kaarin Michaelsen TuTh, 2:00-3:15 p.m. 3204 MHRA Rule Britannia to Cool Britannia : Britain in the Twentieth Century In 1901, Britain was the world s sole great power, both literally at that juncture, it ruled over nearly 400 million people on five continents and figuratively, as a center of global finance and culture. One hundred years later, however, the picture appeared vastly different. Though Prime Minister Tony Blair and New Labour attempted to frame Britain as Cool Britannia, the epitome of post-modern cultural hipness, in reality, Britain s place in the world had altered markedly -- the empire had all but evaporated, it had relinquished its place as the dominant global power to its former colony-turned-ally across the pond, and its society exhibited sharp cleavages along racial and class lines. Yet, in 2001 Britons still had much of which to be proud a resurgent National Health Service, an increasingly influential role within the EU, and its status as one of the world s oldest surviving democracies. In this course, students will examine how Britons managed though not always successfully to navigate the tumultuous twentieth century, focusing on how the social, political, gender, and racial boundaries established during the Victorian period were radically re-shaped by the events of the years 1901-2001. The basic format of this course will consist of group discussions of assigned readings drawn from the work of historians (e.g. Chris Waters and Paul Ward), along with a variety of primary source documents written by Britons themselves (e.g. Churchill s speeches and Sex Pistols lyrics). Students will be expected to participate extensively in the discussions, debates, and other in-class activities throughout the semester. Assignments will consist of three short essays (5-7 pages for undergraduates; 8-10 pages for graduate students) and weekly responses (2 pages max) to the assigned readings. This seminar is intended for junior and senior History majors, as well as History graduate students, but individuals from other years and disciplines are very welcome to participate. While students aren t required to have had any previous course work in British history prior to taking this class, they ll find it useful to have a basic working knowledge (equivalent to History 223) of 20 th century European history. Required Readings The following books are required for this course and are available for purchase at the UNCG Bookstore and at Addams Bookstore. Copies of the books will also be placed on reserve in Jackson Library. Note: The editions listed below are those in stock at the bookstores; other editions are perfectly acceptable substitutes and can often be purchased at substantially cheaper prices via the Internet. Brittain, Vera. Testament of Youth (Penguin Classics) Churchill, Caryl. Serious Money (Methuen) Fleming, Ian. Casino Royale (Penguin) Forster, E. M. Howards End (Dover) Roberts, Robert. The Classic Slum (Penguin) 1

Other required reading for this class will be in the form of journal articles and short selections from other primary sources. These items will be available via electronic reserve through Jackson Library. Occasionally, Xerox copies will be distributed in class. Grading Grades for this course will be assigned according to the following scheme: 25% -- Participation 20% -- Paper Assignment 1 20% -- Paper Assignment 2 20% -- Paper Assignment 3 10% -- Written Responses 5% -- Attendance Weather Information On days when the weather looks iffy, please be sure to call the UNCG Adverse Weather Line (336) 334-4000 or look on the UNCG home page (www.uncg.edu) for updates. I will also be posting notices on the course Blackboard site. If there is a delayed opening that runs into our normal class time, please come to class as soon as the delay is over; our class meetings will run through the end of the regularly scheduled period. Plagiarism Policy UNCG takes the Academic Integrity Policy extremely seriously, as do I. Any work submitted that is found to contain plagiarized material will immediately receive a failing grade, and disciplinary action will be taken in accordance with the University s policies. Syllabus January 20: January 22: Introduction: From Rule Britannia to Cool Britannia Land of Hope and Glory?: Britain s Twentieth Century Plus Ca Change?: Late Victorian and Edwardian Britain, 1901-1914 January 27: Death of a Queen, Death of an Era: Britain in 1901 January 29: The Sun Never Sets : The Empire at the Fin-de-Siecle Imperialism Documents (Xerox) Excerpts from The London Times and the Illustrated London News on the death of Queen Victoria (Xerox) Ward, Monarchy and Empire, in Britishness Since 1870 (Xerox) 2

February 3: February 5: Working Class Culture in Edwardian Britain The gift of the rich to the poor : Poverty, Charity, and Class The Classic Slum, Chapters 1-3, 5-8 Ross, Hungry Children: Housewives and London Charity, 1870-1918 (E-Reserve) February 10: February 12: February 17: February 19: Only Connecting : Middle Class and Intellectual Life in the Edwardian Era The Strange Death of Liberal England Howards End. Chapter breakdown to be given in class. Deeds, Not Words! : The Edwardian Suffrage Movement Votes for Women Yes or No? In-Class Debate Selections from Pro- and Anti-Suffrage Authors (Xerox) The Great War and the Dark Valley, 1914-1939 February 24: Goodbye to all that : Britons and the Great War February 26: A corner of a foreign field that is forever England : Voices of 1914-1918 March 2: March 3: March 5: Brittain, Testament of Youth. Chapters TBA in class. Poems by Rupert Brooke, Wilfrid Owen, and Rudyard Kipling (ER) Paper 1 Due (Electronic Submission) by Noon! (Note: This is a Monday!) Peace for our time?: The Road to the Second World War Peace with honour?: The Debate Over Appeasement Excerpts from speeches by Neville Chamberlain and Winston Churchill (Xerox) Spring Break! No Class! : ) Their Finest Hour?: Britons and the Second World War, 1939-1945 March 17: We re in the biggest mess since the Battle of Hastings! : 1939-1941 March 19: The People s War : Living Through the Blitz Orwell, England Your England (1941) (ER) Churchill, Their Finest Hour (1940) (ER) Murrow, Can They Take It? (1940) (ER) Cockett, Bombs, Busyness, and Hoping for Babies (1940) (ER) 3

You ve Never Had It So Good?: Post-War Britain, 1945-1979 March 24: March 26: March 30: March 31: April 2: April 7: April 9: Shaken, Not Stirred : Bond, Bombs, and Britain in the Fifties Casino Royale Priestley, Britain and the Nuclear Bombs (1957) (ER) Random Day Off! Enjoy the Unexpected Freedom! Paper 2 Due (Electronic Submission) by Noon! (Note: This is a Monday!) Imperial Legacies: De-Colonization and the End of Empire Dark Strangers in Our Midst : Post-War Immigration and Racism Bailkin, Leaving Home: The Politics of Deportation in Post-War Britain (ER) Powell, Rivers of Blood Speech (1968) (ER) Excerpts from The London Times on the Notting Hill Riots (Xerox) Churchill, A Protest Against Britain s Shameful Flight from India (1947) (ER Lahiri, South Asians in Post-Imperial Britain: De-Colonization and Imperial Legacy (ER) Paul, Communities of Britishness: Migration in the Last Gasp of Empire (ER) Waters, Dark Strangers in Our Midst (ER) From Swinging London to Anarchy in the UK : Social Unrest in the 1970s Sunday Bloody Sunday : The Intractable Problem of Northern Ireland Conroy, Belfast Diary: War as a Way of Life, Chapters 1, 2, and 4 (Xerox) Lyrics from the Kinks, the Clash, Pink Floyd, and the Sex Pistols (Xerox) Buford, Dusseldorf, from Among the Thugs (ER) Britain and Britishness in a Post-Modern World, 1979-2001 April 14: April 16: April 21: April 23: The Thatcher Revolution, New Labour, and Cool Britannia Greed is Good : Serious Money and the Culture of the Eighties Thatcher, Speech to the Conservative Party Conference, 1975 (ER) Blair, Speech to the Labour Party Conference, 1997 (ER) Churchill, Serious Money Optional Film: The History Boys Imagining the New, Multi-Cultural, Multi-Ethnic Britain Muslim or British or both? : The Changing Nature of British Identity Waldman, Seething Unease Shaped British Bombers Newfound Zeal (2005) (ER) Kureishi, My Son the Fanatic (ER) Moore, Time for a More Liberal and Racist Immigration Policy (1991) (ER) Rushdie, The New Empire Within Britain (1984) (ER) 4

Alibhai-Brown, Imagining the New Britain, Introduction and Chapters 1 and 4 (Xerox) April 28: May 1: Britain and Britishness in the 21 st Century Lunn, Reconsidering Britishness : The Construction and Significance of National Identity in Twentieth-Century Britain (ER) Final Paper Due (Electronic Submissions) by 5 p.m. (Note: This is a Friday!) 5