History Review, Issue: 68
Ian Garrett looks at the experience of coalitions and minority governments in nineteenth and twentieth-century British politics. |
Mary Heimann restores Czechoslovakia to its pivotal role in the Munich Crisis. |
Nicholas Dixon asks whether there was a radical transition between the two eras. |
Rowena Hammal examines the fears and insecurities, as well as the bombast and jingoism, in British thinking. |
Richard Hughes asks whether the ‘Diabolical Duchess’ was in reality another Tudor victim. |
Mark Rathbone puts the famous 1954 school segregation case, Brown v. Board of Education, into historical context. |
Stuart Clayton ask whether the mass media have undermined the status of leading authority figures in Britain since 1945. |
Graham Goodlad reviews the career of A.J. Balfour, an unsuccessful Prime Minister and party leader but an important and long-serving figure on the British political... |
Gemma Betros examines the problems the Revolution posed for religion, and that religion posed for the Revolution. |
Richard Wilkinson elucidates the paradoxical career of one of the key figures of English Protestantism. |
Graham Goodlad sees virtues in a new study of recent prime ministers. |
Gidon Cohen commends a new biographical study of Karl Marx |
Robert Pearce rates a new study central to the interwar years. |
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This Month's Magazine
February 2012
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