War Representation In British Cinema And Television: From Suez To Thatcher, And Beyond

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This book explores alternatives to realist, triumphalist, and heroic representations of war in British film and television. Focusing on the period between the Suez Crisis of 1956 and the Falkland War but offering connections to the moment of Brexit, it argues that the “lost continent” of existential, satirical, simulated, and abstractly traumatic war stories is as central to understanding Britain’s martial history as the mainstream inheritance. The book features case studies that stress the contribution of exiled or expatriate directors and outsider sensibilities, with particular emphasis on Peter Watkins, Joseph Losey, and Richard Lester. At the same time, it demonstrates concerns and stylistic emphases that continue to the present in television series and films by directors such as Lone Scherfig and Christopher Nolan. Encompassing everything from features to government information films, the book explores related trends in the British film industry, popular culture, and film criticism, while offering a sense of how these contexts contribute to historical memory.

Author(s): Kevin M. Flanagan
Series: Britain And The World
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Year: 2019

Language: English
Pages: 233
Tags: British Cinema and TV, War Representation

Front Matter ....Pages i-xi
Introduction: Toward an Alternative Tradition of War Representation (Kevin M. Flanagan)....Pages 1-26
Tragedy, Bleakness, Cynicism, and Existentialism in British War Cinema, 1956–1982 (Kevin M. Flanagan)....Pages 27-62
Comic and Satirical Alternatives to the “Pleasure Culture of War” (Kevin M. Flanagan)....Pages 63-109
On Screen and at Arm’s Length: Social Class and the Simulation of Combat (Kevin M. Flanagan)....Pages 111-156
The Bomb and After: Fantasies of Apocalypse and Decline (Kevin M. Flanagan)....Pages 157-195
Conclusion: The Legacies of 1960s and 1970s War Representation, from Thatcher to Brexit (Kevin M. Flanagan)....Pages 197-216
Back Matter ....Pages 217-225