Book Cover

Democratising History: Modern British History Inside and Out

Contributor(s): Carter, Laura (Editor), Foks, Freddy (Editor), Harling, Philip (Editor)

ISBN: 9781915249890

Publisher: University of London Press

Hardcover
$120.00
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Pub Date: August 7, 2025

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Illustrated

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 1.10" H x 9.29" L x 6.06" W ( 1.32 lbs) 282 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

How has democracy transformed modern Britain and the way we teach its history? Democratising History answers this question by showcasing how scholars have successfully united social and cultural histories of democracy in British history. Nine research-led chapters provide an 'inside' perspective on democracy in modern British history, covering the complex relationship between Britain and its Empire, the democratisation of metropolitan culture, and how experts aimed to inform public debate in a changing democratic society. An 'outside' perspective is brought by six interludes that engage with the democratising forces at work in the twenty-first-century academy that are reshaping the profession, and thus the histories that scholars produce. In bringing these two histories of democracy together within a single conceptual framework, this book narrates an important shift in the landscape of UK higher education from the 'inside' and the 'outside', insisting that professional and intellectual changes must be seen alongside one another. Collectively, this volume responds to the scholarly and professional contributions of Peter Mandler, whose sensitive readings of cultural discourses and their social reach has inspired a generation of modern British historians. Through novel methods, insightful case studies and broader reflections on the profession, it shows how modern British history is being transformed by these questions and wider social and economic changes in contemporary Britain.

Brief description: Laura Carter is a historian of modern Britain whose work focuses on histories of education, gender, and social change. Her first book is Histories of Everyday Life: The Making of Popular Social History in Britain, 1918-1979.

Review Quotes:

Peter Mandler's interests have swaggered across two centuries and varied sites in modern British history - from the comprehensive school to the country house, from Westminster and Whig salons to the postwar town centre. He has embraced political history, cultural history, intellectual history, and the history of anthropology and the social sciences. His range and rigour are reflected in this fine festschrift, Democratising History. The masterful introduction sets the ample scene. Five 'interludes' testify to the exuberant generosity of Mandler's intellectual fellowship and the energy and grit of his administrative service to the profession and the subject. Nine crisp chapters by Mandler's former PhD students cover a cornucopia of topics from the mechanics of the art market to public housing, from Victorian ideas of democracy to reckoning with 'the Orient', from the secondary modern to the new sciences of sociological and anthropological observation. It brims with new research and shiny nuggets. (Who knew that the prostitutes of the wartime West End were known as 'Piccadilly Commandoes'?) This collection is a fitting monument to Mandler's unique contribution to the history profession, but also to his intellectual reach, or rather (to use a term he popularised) his 'throw'.
- Amanda Vickery, Professor of Early Modern History, Queen Mary University of London, UK

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