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Explaining History – Shellshock Nation: Fear, Fantasy, and the Myth of the "Devil's Decade"

Episode Summary:

In this episode of Explaining History, Nick talks to cultural historian Alwyn Turner about his latest book, Shellshock Nation: Britain Between the Wars.

We often remember the 1930s as W.H. Auden’s “low, dishonest decade”—a time of mass unemployment, hunger marches, and the looming shadow of fascism. But was it really all doom and gloom? Alwyn argues that for many in Britain, the interwar years were a period of vibrant creativity, rising living standards, and the birth of modern consumer culture.

From the explosion of paperback books and the popularity of greyhound racing to the abdication crisis and the fear of aerial bombardment, we explore the complexities of a society caught between the trauma of the First World War and the terror of the Second. Was the British Union of Fascists really a threat? Why did the public cling to appeasementAppeasement Full Description The British and French policy of making concessions to Nazi Germany in the 1930s, associated primarily with Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain. Its most notorious expression was the Munich Agreement of September 1938, which ceded the Sudetenland to Germany without Czech consent. Chamberlain returned to London declaring “peace for our time.” Within six months, Germany had occupied the rest of Czechoslovakia. Appeasement has become a byword for the futile accommodation of aggressive dictators. Critical Perspective The post-war demonisation of appeasement — and of Chamberlain — has been substantially qualified by revisionist historians. Britain in 1938 was not ready for war: rearmament was incomplete, the dominions opposed conflict, public opinion was strongly against another war, and military advisers were pessimistic about British prospects. Appeasement bought a year’s time for rearmament. The deeper failure was not Munich itself but the preceding decade of disarmament and wishful thinking that made the choice between war and capitulation so stark.? And how did a nation that prided itself on being “non-political” navigate the age of extremes?

Key Topics:

  • The Devil’s Decade: Reassessing the 1930s beyond the Depression.
  • The Abdication Crisis: Why the public accepted the departure of the “Playboy Prince.”
  • The Paperback Revolution: How Penguin Books democratized reading.
  • The Shadow of the Bomber: How the fear of air war changed British psychology.

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