1.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
2.
Tosh, J. Why history matters. History and Policy - Policy Papers (2008).
3.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
4.
De Groot, G. J. Blighty: British society in the era of the Great War. (Longman, 1996).
5.
Tomlinson, J. Public policy and the economy since 1900. (Clarendon Press, 1990).
6.
Coles, A. J. The Moral Economy of the Crowd: Some Twentieth-Century Food Riots. Journal of British Studies 18, (1978).
7.
Matthew Hilton. The Female Consumer and the Politics of Consumption in Twentieth-Century Britain. The Historical Journal 45, 103–128 (2002).
8.
Karen Hunt. The Politics of Food and Women’s Neighborhood Activism in First World War Britain. International Labor and Working-Class History 8–26 (2010).
9.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
10.
Harris, B. The origins of the British welfare state: society, state, and social welfare in England and Wales, 1800-1945. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2004).
11.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
12.
Charles Webster. Healthy or Hungry Thirties? History Workshop 110–129 (1982).
13.
‘The Man with the Powder Puff’ in Inter-war London.
14.
Meek, J. Queer voices in post-war Scotland: male homosexuality, religion and society. vol. Genders and sexualities in history (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).
15.
Shore, H. ‘Constable dances with instructress’: the police and the Queen of Nightclubs in inter-war London. Social History 38, 183–202 (2013).
16.
Settle, L. The Kosmo Club Case: Clandestine Prostitution during the Interwar Period. Twentieth Century British History 25, 562–584 (2014).
17.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
18.
SCOTT, P. Did owner-occupation lead to smaller families for interwar working-class households? The Economic History Review 61, 99–124 (2008).
19.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
20.
Zweiniger-Bargielowska, I. & MyiLibrary. Austerity in Britain: rationing, controls, and consumption, 1939-1955. (Oxford University Press, 2000).
21.
Benson, J. Affluence and authority: a social history of twentieth-century Britain. (Arnold, 2005).
22.
Langhamer, C. The Meanings of Home in Postwar Britain. Journal of Contemporary History 40, 341–362 (2005).
23.
McCloskey, D. N. & Floud, R. The economic history of Britain since 1700. (Cambridge University Press, 1994).
24.
Calder, A. The people’s war: Britain 1939-45. (Pimlico, 1992).
25.
Timmins, N. The five giants [new edition] : a biography of the welfare state. (William Collins, 2AD).
26.
Johnson, P. Twentieth-century Britain: economic, social, and cultural change. (Longman, 1994).
27.
Morgan, K. O. Labour in power, 1945-1951. (Clarendon Press, 1984).
28.
Abrams, L. Oral history theory. (Routledge, 2016).
29.
The oral history reader. vol. Routledge readers in history (Routledge, 2016).
30.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
31.
Kent, S. K. Gender and power in Britain, 1640-1990. (Routledge, 1999).
32.
Beddoe, D. Women between the wars.
33.
Bruley, S. Women in Britain since 1900. vol. Social history in perspective (Macmillan Press, 1999).
34.
Cook, H. No turning back: family forms and sexual mores in modern Britain. History and Policy - Policy Papers (2003).
35.
Johnson, P. Twentieth-century Britain: economic, social, and cultural change. (Longman, 1994).
36.
Thane, P. Towards Equal Opportunities? Women in Britain since 1945. in Britain Since 1945 (eds. Gourvish, T. & O’Day, A.) 183–208 (Macmillan Education UK, 1991). doi:10.1007/978-1-349-21603-1_9.
37.
Economy: 1944 Employment White Paper [MT’s annotated copy].
38.
Savage, M. Working-Class Identities in the 1960s: Revisiting the Affluent Worker Study. Sociology 39, 929–946 (2005).
39.
Offer, A. British Manual Workers: From Producers to Consumers,                              1950–2000. Contemporary British History 22, 537–571 (2008).
40.
Hilton, M. & MyiLibrary. Consumerism in twentieth-century Britain: the search for a historical movement. (Cambridge University Press, 2003).
41.
Casey, E. Catalogue communities: Work and consumption in the UK catalogue industry. Journal of Consumer Culture 15, 391–406 (2015).
42.
Hay, C. Review Essays Symposium: The Winter of Discontent. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 181–203 (2015) doi:10.3828/hsir.2015.36.7.
43.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
44.
Welshman, J. Troubled Families: the lessons of history, 1880-2012. History and Policy - Policy Papers (2012).
45.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
46.
Knox, B. & McKinlay, A. Working for the Yankee Dollar: American Inward Investment and Scottish Labour, 1945-70. Historical Studies in Industrial Relations 1–26 (1999) doi:10.3828/hsir.1999.7.1.
47.
McDowell, L., Anitha, S. & Pearson, R. Striking Narratives: class, gender and ethnicity in the ‘Great Grunwick Strike’, London, UK, 1976–1978. Women’s History Review 23, 595–619 (2014).
48.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
49.
Tomlinson, J. Inventing ‘Decline’: The Falling behind of the British Economy in the Postwar Years. The Economic History Review 49, 731–757 (1996).
50.
Tomlinson, J. De-industrialization Not Decline: A New Meta-narrative for Post-war British History. Twentieth Century British History 27, 76–99 (2016).
51.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
52.
Addison, P., Jones, H., & Ebooks Corporation Limited. A companion to contemporary Britain: 1939-2000. vol. Blackwell companions to British history (Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2005).
53.
Jackson, B. & Saunders, R. Making Thatcher’s Britain ̀. (Cambridge University Press, 2012).
54.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
55.
Tomlinson, J. Mrs Thatcher’s Macroeconomic Adventurism, 1979–1981, and its Political Consequences. British Politics 2, 3–19 (2007).
56.
Atkinson, W., Roberts, S. & Savage, M. Class inequality in austerity Britain: Power, difference and suffering. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).
57.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
58.
Netto, G. A review of poverty and ethnicity in Scotland. (4AD).
59.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
60.
Addison, P., Jones, H., & Ebooks Corporation Limited. A companion to contemporary Britain: 1939-2000. vol. Blackwell companions to British history (Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2005).
61.
Yeo, Eileen Janes. ‘The Boy it the Father of the Man’: Moral Panic Over Working-Class Youth, 1850 to the Present. Labour History Review (Maney Publishing) 69, 185–199 (2004).
62.
Garland, J. et al. Youth Culture, Popular Music and the End of ‘Consensus’ in Post-War Britain. Contemporary British History 26, 265–271 (2012).
63.
Resistance through rituals: youth subcultures in post-war Britain. (Routledge, 2006).
64.
Meek, J. Queer voices in post-war Scotland: male homosexuality, religion and society. vol. Genders and sexualities in history (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).
65.
Bauer, H. & Cook, M. Queer 1950s: rethinking sexuality in the postwar years. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).
66.
The Cambridge economic history of modern Britain. (Cambridge University Press, 2014).
67.
Wilkinson, R. G. & Pickett, K. The spirit level: why equality is better for everyone. (Penguin Books, 2010).
68.
Peter Temin. The Great Recession & the Great Depression. Daedalus 139, (2010).
69.
Did Liberals Cause the Sub-Prime Crisis? http://prospect.org/article/did-liberals-cause-sub-prime-crisis.
70.
Cobham, D., Adam, C. & Mayhew, K. The economic record of the 1997-2010 Labour government: an assessment. Oxford Review of Economic Policy 29, 1–24 (2013).
71.
Bruce, S., Glendinning, T., Paterson, I. & Rosie, M. Religious discrimination in Scotland: Fact or myth? Ethnic and Racial Studies 28, 151–168 (2005).
72.
Clayton, T. ‘Diasporic Otherness’: racism, sectarianism and ‘national exteriority’ in modern Scotland. Social & Cultural Geography 6, 99–116 (2005).
73.
Evans, D.T. Keep the Clause: Section 28 and the Politics of Sexuality in Scotland and the UK. Soundings a Journal of Politics and Culture 18, 208–224 (2001).
74.
Ormston, R., Curtice, J., Hinchliffe, S. & Marcinkiewicz, A. A Subtle but Intractable Problem? Public Attitudes to Sectarianism in 2014. Scottish Affairs 24, 266–287 (2015).
75.
Rahman, M. The Shape of Equality: Discursive Deployments during the Section 28 Repeal in Scotland. Sexualities 7, 150–166 (2004).
76.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
77.
Simmonds, A. G. V. Britain and World War One. (Routledge, 2012).
78.
Andrews, M. & Lomas, J. The home front in Britain: images, myths and forgotten experiences since 1914. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
79.
Bourke, J. Women on the Home Front in World War One. https://www.bbc.co.uk/history/british/britain_wwone/women_employment_01.shtml (2011).
80.
Broadberry, S. & Harrison, M. The Economics of World War I. (Cambridge University Press, 2005).
81.
De Groot, G. J. Blighty: British society in the era of the Great War. (Longman, 1996).
82.
Gazeley, I. & Newell, A. The First World War and working-class food consumption in Britain. European Review of Economic History 17, 71–94 (2013).
83.
Hughes, A. & Meek, J. State Regulation, Family Breakdown, and Lone Motherhood: The Hidden Costs of World War I in Scotland. Journal of Family History 39, 364–387 (2014).
84.
Andrews, M. & Lomas, J. The home front in Britain: images, myths and forgotten experiences since 1914. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
85.
Andrews, M. & Lomas, J. The home front in Britain: images, myths and forgotten experiences since 1914. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).
86.
Marwick, A. The deluge: British society and the First World War. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2006).
87.
Maver, I. Glasgow. vol. Town and city histories (Edinburgh University Press, 2000).
88.
Petrie, A. The 1915 rent strikes: an East Coast perspective. vol. Abertay Historical Society (Abertay Historical Society, 2008).
89.
Robb, G. British culture and the First World War. vol. Social history in perspective (Palgrave, 2002).
90.
Roper, M. The secret battle: emotional survival in the Great War. vol. Cultural history of modern war (Manchester University Press, 2009).
91.
Breitenbach, E. & Gordon, E. Out of bounds: women in Scottish society, 1800-1945. vol. Edinburgh education and society series (Edinburgh University Press, 1992).
92.
Stevenson, J. British society 1914-1945. vol. Penguin social history of Britain (Penguin Books, 1990).
93.
Wall, R. & Winter, J. M. The upheaval of war: family, work and welfare in Europe, 1914-1918. (Cambridge University Press, 1988).
94.
Winter, J. M. The Great War and the British people. (Palgrave/Macmillan, 2003).
95.
Todd, S. Flappers and Factory Lads: Youth and Youth Culture in Interwar Britain. History Compass 4, 715–730 (2006).
96.
Settle, L. The Kosmo Club Case: Clandestine Prostitution during the Interwar Period. Twentieth Century British History 25, 562–584 (2014).
97.
Meek, J. Queer voices in post-war Scotland: male homosexuality, religion and society. vol. Genders and sexualities in history (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015).
98.
‘The Man with the Powder Puff’ in Inter-war London.
99.
Davidson, R. Venereal Disease, Sexual Morality, and Public Health in Interwar Scotland.
100.
Holtzman, E. M. The Pursuit of Married Love: Women’s Attitudes Toward Sexuality and Marriage In Great Britain, 1918-1939. Journal of Social History 16, 39–51 (1982).
101.
Cocks, H. A. ‘Sporty’ Girls and ‘Artistic’ Boys: Friendship, Illicit Sex, and the British ‘Companionship’ Advertisement, 1913-1928. Journal of the History of Sexuality 11, 457–482 (2002).
102.
Horwood, C. ‘Girls who arouse dangerous passins’: wmen and bathing, 1900-39. Women’s History Review 9, 653–673 (2000).
103.
Houlbrook, M. Soldier Heroes and Rent Boys: Homosex, Masculinities, and Britishness in the Brigade of Guards, circa 1900–1960. The Journal of British Studies 42, 351–388 (2003).
104.
Hughes, A. & Meek, J. State Regulation, Family Breakdown, and Lone Motherhood. Journal of Family History 39, 364–387 (2014).
105.
Giles, J. ‘Playing Hard to Get’: working‐class women, sexuality and respectability in Britain, 1918‐40. Women’s History Review 1, 239–255 (1992).
106.
Slater, S. Pimps, Police and Filles de Joie: Foreign Prostitution in Interwar London. The London Journal 32, 53–74 (2007).
107.
Slater, S. Prostitutes and popular history: notes on the ‘underworld’, 1918-1939. Crime, Histoire & Sociétés 13, 25–48 (2009).
108.
Walkowitz, J. R. The ‘Vision of Salome’: Cosmopolitanism and Erotic Dancing in Central London, 1908-1918. The American Historical Review 108, 337–376 (2003).
109.
Woollacott, A. ‘Khaki Fever’ and its Control: Gender, Class, Age and Sexual Morality on the British Homefront in the First World War. Journal of Contemporary History 29, 325–347 (1994).
110.
Zweiniger-Bargielowska, I. The Making of a Modern Female Body: beauty, health and fitness in interwar Britain. Women’s History Review 20, 299–317 (2011).
111.
Abrams, L. Oral history theory. (Routledge, 2016).
112.
Passerini, L. Memory. History Workshop 195–196 (1983).
113.
Summerfield, P. Culture and Composure: Creating Narratives of the Gendered Self in Oral History Interviews. Cultural and Social History 1, 65–93 (2004).
114.
Judy Giles. Narratives of Gender, Class, and Modernity in Women’s Memories of Mid‐Twentieth Century Britain. Signs 28, 21–41 (2002).
115.
Green, A. & Troup, K. The houses of history: a critical reader in twentieth century history and theory. (Manchester University Press, 1999).
116.
Iacovetta, F. Post-modern ethnography, historical materialism and decentering the (male) authorial voice: a feminist converstaion. Histoire sociale/Social history 53, 289–293 (1999).
117.
Lummis, T. Listening to history: the authenticity of oral evidence. (Hutchinson Education, 1987).
118.
Hughes, A. Gender and political identities in Scotland, 1919-1939. vol. Scottish historical review monographs series (Edinburgh University Press, 2010).
119.
Alexander, S. Men’s Fears and Women’s Work: Responses to Unemployment in London Between the Wars. Gender  History 12, 401–425 (2000).
120.
Todd, S. Breadwinners and Dependants: Working-Class Young People in England, 1918–1955. International Review of Social History 52, (2007).
121.
Todd, S. & Oxford University Press. Young women, work, and family in England 1918-1950. (Oxford University Press, 2005).
122.
Benson, J. The rise of consumer society in Britain, 1880-1980. vol. Themes in British social history (Longman, 1994).
123.
Bingham, A. ‘An Era of Domesticity’? Histories of Women and Gender in Interwar Britain. Cultural and Social History 1, 225–233 (2004).
124.
Langhamer, C. Women’s leisure in England, 1920-60. vol. Studies in popular culture (Manchester, England) (Manchester University Press, 2000).
125.
Todd, S. Young Women, Work, and Leisure in Interwar England. The Historical Journal 48, 789–809 (2005).
126.
Devine, T. M. & Finlay, R. J. Scotland in the twentieth century. (Edinburgh University Press, 1996).
127.
McKibbin, R. Classes and cultures: England, 1918-1951. (Oxford University Press, 1998).
128.
Wightman, C. More than munitions: women, work and the engineering industries, 1900-1950. vol. Women and men in history (Longman, 1999).
129.
Wilson, G. Women’s work in offices and the preservation of men’s ‘breadwinning’ jobs in early twentieth-century Glasgow. Women’s History Review 10, 463–482 (2001).
130.
Todd, S. & Oxford University Press. Young women, work, and family in England 1918-1950. (Oxford University Press, 2005).
131.
The National Archives. Women, darts and the pub in the interwar period | The National Archives.
132.
McKibbin, R. Classes and cultures: England, 1918-1951. (Oxford University Press, 1998).
133.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
134.
Skillen, F. ‘Woman and the Sport Fetish’: Modernity, Consumerism and Sports Participation in Inter-War Britain. The International Journal of the History of Sport 29, 750–765 (2012).
135.
Twentieth-century Britain: economic, cultural and social change. (Routledge, 2014).
136.
Tomlinson, J. Inventing ‘Decline’: The Falling behind of the British Economy in the Postwar Years. The Economic History Review 49, (1996).
137.
Tomlinson, J. De-industrialization Not Decline: A New Meta-narrative for Post-war British History. Twentieth Century British History 27, 76–99 (2016).
138.
Clarke, P. F. & Trebilcock, C. Understanding decline: perceptions and realities of British economic performance. (Cambridge University Press, 1997).
139.
The Cambridge economic history of modern Britain. (Cambridge University Press, 2014).
140.
The Cambridge economic history of modern Britain. (Cambridge University Press, 2014).
141.
The Cambridge economic history of modern Britain. (Cambridge University Press, 2014).
142.
Feinstein, C. Structural change in the developed countries during the twentieth century. Oxford Review of Economic Policy 15, 35–55 (1999).
143.
Crafts, N. F. R. The Golden Age of Economic Growth in Western Europe, 1950-1973. The Economic History Review 48, (1995).
144.
Rowthorn, B. & Wells, J. R. De-industrialization and foreign trade. (Cambridge University Press, 1987).
145.
Singh, A. UK industry and the world economy: a case of de-industrialisation? Cambridge Journal of Economics 1, 113–136 (1977).
146.
Crafts, N. F. R. Britain’s relative economic decline, 1870-1995: a quantitative perspective. (Social Market Foundation, 1997).
147.
Blackaby, F. T. & National Institute of Economic and Social Research. De-industrialisation. vol. Economic policy papers (Heinemann Educational, 1978).
148.
William J. Baumol. Macroeconomics of Unbalanced Growth: The Anatomy of Urban Crisis. The American Economic Review 57, 415–426 (1967).
149.
Booth, A. The manufacturing failure hypothesis and the performance of British industry during the long boom. The Economic History Review 56, 1–33 (2003).
150.
Edgerton, D. & University of Manchester. Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine. England and the aeroplane: an essay on a militant and technological nation. vol. Science, technology and medicine in modern history (M [i.e. Macmillan] in association with the Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine, University of Manchester, 1991).
151.
Temin, P. The Golden Age of European growth reconsidered. European Review of Economic History 6, 3–22 (2002).
152.
Tomlinson, J. Thrice Denied: ‘Declinism’ as a Recurrent Theme in British History in the Long Twentieth Century. Twentieth Century British History 20, 227–251 (2009).
153.
Elliott, L. & Atkinson, D. Going south: why Britain will have a Third World economy by 2014. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2012).
154.
Martin, R. & Rowthorn, B. The Geography of de-industrialisation. vol. Critical human geography (Macmillan, 1986).
155.
Cohen, S. & Ebooks Corporation Limited. Folk devils and moral panics: the creation of the mods and the rockers. (Routledge, 2002).
156.
Addison, P., Jones, H., & Ebooks Corporation Limited. A companion to contemporary Britain: 1939-2000. vol. Blackwell companions to British history (Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2005).
157.
Worley, M. Oi! Oi! Oi!: Class, Locality, and British Punk. Twentieth Century British History 24, 606–636 (2013).
158.
Yeo, E. J. ‘The boy is the father of the man’: moral panic over working-class youth, 1850 to the present. Labour History Review (Maney Publishing) 69, 185–199 (2004).
159.
August, A. Gender and 1960s Youth Culture: The Rolling Stones and the New Woman. Contemporary British History 23, 79–100 (2009).
160.
Bartie, A. Moral Panics and Glasgow Gangs: Exploring ‘the New Wave of Glasgow Hooliganism’, 1965–1970. Contemporary British History 24, 385–408 (2010).
161.
Teddy Boys and Girls as Neo-flâneurs in Postwar London. Literary London Society 11, 3–17 (2014).
162.
Bennett, A. Cultures of popular music. vol. Issues in cultural and media studies (Open University Press, 2001).
163.
Bradley, K. Juvenile delinquency and the public sphere: exploring local and national discourse in England,                              . 1940–69. Social History 37, 19–35 (2012).
164.
Brake, M. The Skinheads: ‘An English Working Class Subculture’. Youth and Society 6,.
165.
Brake, M. & Dawson Books. Comparative youth culture: the sociology of youth cultures and youth subcultures in America, Britain and Canada. (Routledge, 1985).
166.
Brown, T. S. Subcultures, Pop Music and Politics: Skinheads and ‘Nazi Rock’ in England and Germany. Journal of Social History 38, 157–178 (2004).
167.
Cohen, S. & Ebooks Corporation Limited. Folk devils and moral panics: the creation of the mods and the rockers. (Routledge, 2002).
168.
Fowler, D. Youth culture in modern Britain, c.1920-c.1970: from ivory tower to global movement - a new history. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008).
169.
Garland, J. et al. Youth Culture, Popular Music and the End of ‘Consensus’ in Post-War Britain. Contemporary British History 26, 265–271 (2012).
170.
Gildart, K. Images of England through popular music: class, youth and rock ‘n’ roll, 1955-1976. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013).
171.
Grayson, R. S. Mods, Rockers and Juvenile delinquency in 1964: The government response. Contemporary British History 12, 19–47 (1998).
172.
Hall, S. & Jefferson, T. Resistance through rituals: youth subcultures in post-war Britain. (Routledge, 2006).
173.
Hebdige, D. Subculture: the meaning of style. vol. New accents (Methuen&Co.) (Methuen, 1979).
174.
Jackson, L. A. & Bartie, A. Policing youth: Britain, 1945-70. (Manchester University Press, 2014).
175.
Jackson, L. A. ‘The Coffee Club Menace’. Cultural and Social History 5, 289–308 (2008).
176.
Todd, S. & Young, H. Baby-Boomers to ‘Beanstalkers’. Cultural and Social History 9, 451–467 (2012).
177.
Williamson, C. The Ted scare. Revue Francaise de Civilisation Britannique XIX, 49–66 (2014).
178.
Worley, M. & Copsey, N. White Youth: The Far Right, Punk and British Youth Culture, 1977–87. JOMEC Journal 27–47 (2016) doi:10.18573/j.2016.10041.
179.
Worley, M. Oi! Oi! Oi!: Class, Locality, and British Punk. Twentieth Century British History 24, 606–636 (2013).
180.
Fowler, D. & Ebooks Corporation Limited. The first teenagers: the lifestyle of young wage-earners in interwar Britain. (Routledge, 2013).