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Democratising History
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. List of figures
  6. Notes on contributors
  7. Introduction: democratising history inside and out
  8. Interlude A. New challenges: teaching Modern History in a ‘new university’
  9. Part I. Victorian Britain, progress and the wider world
    1. 1. Opium, ‘civilisation’ and the Anglo-Chinese Wars, 1839–60
    2. 2. Archibald Alison’s revolution
    3. Interlude B. Peter and the special relationship
  10. Part II. Culture, consumption and democratisation in Britain since the nineteenth century
    1. Interlude C. Olden times and changing times: museum interpretation and display in twenty-first-century Britain
    2. 3. Painting for pleasure: the rise and decline of the amateur artist in Victorian Britain
    3. 4. Collecting for the nation: the National Art Collections Fund and the gallery-visiting public in interwar Britain
    4. Interlude D. Professionalisation, publishing and policy: Peter Mandler and the Royal Historical Society
  11. Part III. ‘Experts’ and their publics in twentieth-century Britain
    1. Interlude E. Accountability and double counting in research funding for UK higher education: the case of the Global Challenges Research Fund
    2. 5. Reluctant pioneers: British anthropologists among the natives of modern Japan, circa 1929–30
    3. 6. An American Mass Observer among the natives: Robert Jackson Alexander in Second World War Britain
    4. 7. Architecture and sociology: Oliver Cox and Mass Observation
    5. 8. Re-reading ‘race relations research’: journalism, social science and separateness
    6. Interlude F. The Historical Association, schools and the History curriculum
    7. 9. ‘Democracy’ and ‘expertise’ in two secondary modern schools in Liverpool, 1930–67
  12. Index

Democratising History Modern British History Inside and Out

Edited by

Laura Carter, Freddy Foks and Philip Harling

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