Abstract
Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Notes Notes 1. Arthur Marwick, The Nature of History (London, 1970), 189. 2. Arthur Marwick, Unit 1: Introducing the Course, Open University course A318 War, Peace and Social Change: Europe 1900–1955. Book 1: Europe on the Eve of War 1900–1914 (Milton Keynes, 1990), 33. 3. The Listener, 1 May 1969. 4. Noble Frankland, History at War: the campaigns of an historian (London, 1998), 188. 5. Marwick, The Nature of History, 164–165. 6. Arthur Marwick, Film in university teaching, in: Paul Smith (ed.) The Historian and Film (Cambridge, 1976), 142. 7. Arthur Marwick, The Nature of History (3rd edn) (London, 1989), 314–315. 8. Ibid., 315. 9. Arthur Marwick, Class: image and reality in Britain, France and the USA since 1930 (New York, 1980), 22. 10. Arthur Marwick, Room at the Top, Saturday Night and Sunday Morning and the “Cultural Revolution” in Britain, Journal of Contemporary History, 19(1) (January 1984), 130. 11. Richard J. Evans, In Defence of History (London, 1997), 72. 12. Arthur Marwick, Two approaches to historical study: the metaphysical (including “postmodernism”) and the historical, Journal of Contemporary History, 30(1) (January 1995), 5–36. 13. Hayden White, Response to Arthur Marwick, Journal of Contemporary History, 30(2) (April 1995), 233–234. 14. Arthur Marwick, Conclusion, in: Anthony Aldgate, James Chapman and Arthur Marwick (eds) Windows on the Sixties: exploring key texts of media and culture (London, 2000), 185. 15. Arthur Marwick, The Sixties: cultural revolution in Britain, France, Italy and the United States, c.1958–c.1974 (Oxford, 1998), 15.
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