The Labour Party : "socialism" and society since 1951
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Labour Party : "socialism" and society since 1951
(Documents in contemporary history)
Manchester University Press, 1997
- : pbk
- : hbk
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
: hbk ISBN 9780719042690
Description
This book brings together a collection of original documents, many previously unpublished, which trace the history of the Labour party from its electoral zenith in 1951, through the disasters and divisions of the early 1980s to the party's apparent revival under Tony Blair. Focusing on how competing elements within the party responded to persistent electoral failure, it indicates the extent to which the original vision of 'socialism' was consequently transformed. The documents show how the leadership and party members in the constituencies profoundly disagreed over the political implications of postwar social change. They further demonstrate that Labour's 'socialism' has always been a contested concept, the meaning of which divided as much as united the party faithful.
Table of Contents
- Interpreting defeat, 1951-9
- the Gaitskellite challenge, 1959-63
- the natural party of government, 1963-70
- the difficult decade - the seventies
- civil war, 1979-83
- permanent opposition, 1983-92
- New Labour, 1992-5.
- Volume
-
: pbk ISBN 9780719042706
Description
This book brings together a collection of original documents, many previously unpublished, which trace the history of the Labour party from its electoral zenith in 1951, through the disasters and divisions of the early 1980s to the party's apparent revival under Tony Blair. Focusing on how competing elements within the party responded to persistent electoral failure, it indicates the extent to which the original vision of 'socialism' was consequently transformed. The documents show how the leadership and party members in the constituencies profoundly disagreed over the political implications of postwar social change. They further demonstrate that Labour's 'socialism' has always been a contested concept, the meaning of which divided as much as united the party faithful. -- .
Table of Contents
- Interpreting defeat, 1951-9
- the Gaitskellite challenge, 1959-63
- the natural party of government, 1963-70
- the difficult decade - the seventies
- civil war, 1979-83
- permanent opposition, 1983-92
- New Labour, 1992-5.
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