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Stock status
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Audio Book
4 CDs
Total Running Time - 4 hours 55 mins
Audience - General
Product weight 250g

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Authentic voices from the past illustrate this unique history of the twentieth
century written by Joanna Bourke and presented by Tim Pigott-Smith
Eyewitness provides a rare and
fascinating opportunity to hear the events of the century described by those who
saw them happen. A wealth of BBC archive recordings, some never previously
broadcast, is interwoven with an illuminating commentary by the historian Joanna
Bourke
Eyewitness provides a rare and fascinating opportunity to hear the events of the
century described by those who saw them happen. A wealth of BBC archive
recordings, some never previously broadcast, is interwoven with an illuminating
commentary by the historian Joanna Bourke. Published in ten volumes, Eyewitness
examines the role and the life of the British people in each decade of the
century.
Between the onset of the Depression in 1930 and the outbreak of war in 1939,
social and political divisions deepened. Soaring unemployment, wage cuts and the
Means Test humiliated workers, and discontent showed itself in mass
demonstrations such as the Jarrow March. Fascism gained a toe-hold in the UK
with Sir Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists, and in 1936 the rival
ideologies of fascism and communism found a battleground in the Spanish Civil
War.
The decade provided few moments of celebration. Fred Perry won the Men's Singles
title at Wimbledon, and the coronation of George VI was a joyous occasion, but
it was to be the last for some time. Voices such as Churchill and Chamberlain
remind us of the political mood, but it is the testament of ordinary people
buffeted by events beyond their control that are the most telling.
Thought-provoking and moving, these are the voices of the past, speaking to the
present.
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