
Episode 4
Richard Holloway continues his personal exploration of the Scots-British identity with the Great Depression, war and loss of empire.
The Great Depression, war and loss of empire. Richard Holloway continues to explore the Scots-British identity.
Up until the 1930s, Scots were proud of their dual Scottish/British identity. After the great depression had hammered heavy industry, however, confidence was in as short supply as work on Clydeside. While arguments about ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Rule and independence never went away, they started to simmer down in favour of class solidarity across Great Britain. World War 2 heralded a new version of Britishness in which the nations of the UK all pulled together in what was supposed to be the 'People's War'; and after it, they built the welfare state and nationalised industries, so that a strong UK state could help the worst off. At least that was the theory! As the empire shrank, Britain prided itself on gracefully handing out independence to country after country - that was also the theory - though those newly independent countries may have viewed things differently. At home there was a proud and optimistic sense of Britishness, but was this just a bubble before the realities of post-war economics and shrivelled Great-power status caught up with it? Richard Holloway continues his investigation.
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Clips
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Lord Reith and the Empire
Duration: 04:49
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The ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½, Britishness, and Empire
Duration: 05:41
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British attitudes towards the Empire
Duration: 03:22
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Britishness in wartime films
Duration: 21:54
Broadcasts
- Wed 24 Jul 2013 13:32ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Radio Scotland
- Thu 2 Jan 2014 06:03ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Radio Scotland