Description

Book Synopsis

In Great Britain, discussions of the Coronavirus pandemic have frequently been intertwined with references to the Second World War. Such allusions are to be found in political speeches, journalistic accounts and opinion pieces; they are also replete in the cultural sphere. Bringing together scholars from a range of disciplines, this comprehensive volume seeks to evaluate the uses (and abuses) of this rhetoric. The result is a multifaceted meditation on Britain’s response to the pandemic.



Trade Review

«This challenging and controversial volume should give all of us pause for thought. Some contemporary political voices seem to want us to believe that the past is fixed and stable, but the essays presented here remind us that the past is as radically unstable as our future.» (Professor Tom Lawson, Northumbria University)

«In its lively examination of the myriad ways in which the Second World War has been frequently referenced in the current pandemic, Covid-19, the Second World War, and the Idea of Britishness makes a fascinating and important contribution to the scholarship on the war’s cultural memory. A truly enlightening collection and a must read.» (Professor Juliette Pattinson, University of Kent)



Table of Contents

Contents: Joanne Pettitt: Covid-19, the Second World War, and the Idea of Britishness – Charlie Hall: Global Threats to an Island Story: Covid-19 and the British «Foundation Myth» of 1940 – Sophy Antrobus: «A Nation at War»: Battle of Britain Narratives Revived and Repurposed by Covid-19 – Julian Petley: Don’t Mention the War – Leighton Andrews: «Like Any Wartime Government»: Covid-19, Churchillian Imaginaries and the Limits of English Exceptionalism – Peter Donaldson: Taking It on the Chin: Sport, War and Covid-19 – Eluned Gramich: England Is Not a Template: Wales, Britishness and Covid-19 – Tony Kushner: Wrong War Mate (Reprise): Britain, the Holocaust and Covid-19. A Polemic – Linda Maynard: «A Beacon of Light»: Representations of Captain Tom Moore and the «Silent Generation» of Covid-19 Victims – Kara Critchell: Disrupting the Rituals of Grief: Conflict, Covid-19 and the Fracturing of Funerary Tradition – Cat Mahoney: «We Will Meet Again»: Mobilising Prosthetic Memories of the Second World War during the UK Covid-19 Lockdown – Lauren Cantillon: «Keep Calm and Bake Bananas»: Reimagining Wartime Posters for Covid-19 – Robert Eaglestone: Cruel Nostalgia and Covid-19 – Michael Samuel: Finest Hour 2.0: Digital Nostalgic Popular Culture and Covid-19 – Postscript.

Covid-19, the Second World War, and the Idea of

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    A Paperback / softback by Richard J. Finlay, Paul Ward, Joanne Pettitt

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      Publisher: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
      Publication Date: 31/08/2021
      ISBN13: 9781789979794, 978-1789979794
      ISBN10: 178997979X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      In Great Britain, discussions of the Coronavirus pandemic have frequently been intertwined with references to the Second World War. Such allusions are to be found in political speeches, journalistic accounts and opinion pieces; they are also replete in the cultural sphere. Bringing together scholars from a range of disciplines, this comprehensive volume seeks to evaluate the uses (and abuses) of this rhetoric. The result is a multifaceted meditation on Britain’s response to the pandemic.



      Trade Review

      «This challenging and controversial volume should give all of us pause for thought. Some contemporary political voices seem to want us to believe that the past is fixed and stable, but the essays presented here remind us that the past is as radically unstable as our future.» (Professor Tom Lawson, Northumbria University)

      «In its lively examination of the myriad ways in which the Second World War has been frequently referenced in the current pandemic, Covid-19, the Second World War, and the Idea of Britishness makes a fascinating and important contribution to the scholarship on the war’s cultural memory. A truly enlightening collection and a must read.» (Professor Juliette Pattinson, University of Kent)



      Table of Contents

      Contents: Joanne Pettitt: Covid-19, the Second World War, and the Idea of Britishness – Charlie Hall: Global Threats to an Island Story: Covid-19 and the British «Foundation Myth» of 1940 – Sophy Antrobus: «A Nation at War»: Battle of Britain Narratives Revived and Repurposed by Covid-19 – Julian Petley: Don’t Mention the War – Leighton Andrews: «Like Any Wartime Government»: Covid-19, Churchillian Imaginaries and the Limits of English Exceptionalism – Peter Donaldson: Taking It on the Chin: Sport, War and Covid-19 – Eluned Gramich: England Is Not a Template: Wales, Britishness and Covid-19 – Tony Kushner: Wrong War Mate (Reprise): Britain, the Holocaust and Covid-19. A Polemic – Linda Maynard: «A Beacon of Light»: Representations of Captain Tom Moore and the «Silent Generation» of Covid-19 Victims – Kara Critchell: Disrupting the Rituals of Grief: Conflict, Covid-19 and the Fracturing of Funerary Tradition – Cat Mahoney: «We Will Meet Again»: Mobilising Prosthetic Memories of the Second World War during the UK Covid-19 Lockdown – Lauren Cantillon: «Keep Calm and Bake Bananas»: Reimagining Wartime Posters for Covid-19 – Robert Eaglestone: Cruel Nostalgia and Covid-19 – Michael Samuel: Finest Hour 2.0: Digital Nostalgic Popular Culture and Covid-19 – Postscript.

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