Britain Between The Wars

by MARION and Yass

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This is an illustrated description of British life between the First and Second World Wars. This volume, as in all the "English Life" series, uses contemporary accounts and illustrations to recreate the era and the quality of life at that particular time. The period after 1918 was a time when many people looked forward to peace and prosperity. However, many were disappointed for the League of Nations failed to contain aggressive powers, and by 1921 over two million people were unemployed, with the figure rising to nearly three million by 1933. The author attempts to reconstruct what it was like to be on the dole at that time and explains why unemployment was confined mainly to certain industries and areas in Britain. For those with work, though, the standard of living gradually rose, and this was also a period that saw the growth of industries supplying a mass market able to afford mass-produced cars, clothes, domestic appliances and other consumer goods. It was also a time of new entertainments, with cinemas and dance halls opening and the invention of the wireless.
However, the author shows that despite these and many other changes, social classes remained distinct and a person's background largely determined his education, standard of housing, health and opportunities in general. The text is accompanied by a glossary, a further reading list and an index. Marion Yass is author of several titles for Wayland including "The Home Front" and "The Great Depression" in the "Documentary History" series.
  • ISBN10 1852105879
  • ISBN13 9781852105877
  • Publish Date 5 April 1988
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 10 May 2000
  • Publish Country GB
  • Publisher Hachette Children's Group
  • Imprint Hodder Wayland
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 128
  • Language English