The image of Coventry in flames was one of the most haunting of the
Second World War. Yet the excitement and optimism of the 1950s and
1960s were succeeded by a quarter century of urban blight and economic
slump. The collapse of manufacturing industry - machine tools,
aeroplanes, cars - left a proud community adrift and demoralised.
Today a revitalised twenty-first century city, Coventry has embraced
the new millennium and evolved from bleak post-industrial desert to
vibrant cultural oasis, in the process rediscovering a sense of
purpose and a vision for the future. "The City of Coventry" tells the
story of an experiment in social democracy carried out by a
Labour-controlled council which envisaged the bomb shattered city as a
model of urban regeneration and imaginative planning. Post-war
reconstruction could be a striking success, as in the
pedestrian-friendly Precinct and the bold new cathedral, or a notable
failure as in the ever more intrusive ring roads and grim high-rise
flats. In offering a fresh perspective on the city, this innovative
volume of essays rediscovers Coventry as an inspiration for poets and
painters such as Philip Larkin and Terry Frost, musicians as varied as
Benjamin Britten and The Specials, and film-makers such as Humphrey
Jennings, whose "Heart of Britain" was shot in the immediate aftermath
of the Blitz. Adrian Smith skilfully mixes memoir, family history and
meticulous scholarship to paint a complete and incisive portrait of
Coventry. Drawing on new research into topics as diverse as the place
of Surrealism in West Midlands culture and the shadowy presence of
rugby league in a union bastion, Smith brings a unique insight into
the recent history of his native city. Attractively presented, highly
readable and with broad appeal, "The City of Coventry" is a lively
re-examination of an iconic city of the twentieth century illuminating
the profound changes that engulfed industrial England during and after
the Second World War.
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A Twentieth Century Icon
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780857718365
Publisert
2015
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter