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Hurrah for the Blackshirts!: Fascists and Fascism in Britain Between the Wars - Martin Pugh Our price: £3.86
Worthy socio-political history but plodding in parts Generally, this is a readable and informative piece of social and political history, with the author succeeding in placing the disinct phenomenon of British fascism within its wider context. Thus, we are always made aware of the more general party political, economic and international climate, giving us an appreciation of how the British strain of fascism Putting the movement in the wider context This book starts with Prussian troops circling Paris in 1870. The author then painstakingly covers the development of British politics up to 1939, putting the blackshirts, and other movements, in historical context. It is therefore somewhat thin on detail of the blackshirt movement, but is innovative in doing what the author sets out to do: show that the BUF was a logical progression of the political trends of the time, not, as many other supposedly authoritative books often present it, a baffling fluke of political history. In that objective it is successful. For detailed information about the movements themselves, this is perhaps not the book to read. It's not badly written, just badly promoted (like the title, for example). Boring, boring... Whatever the author hoped to achieve with this book failed miserably. This book is one of the most boring books I have ever read with regards to the history of British fascism. The few times that there is mention of British fascist organisations & the leading members, it usually gets its facts wrong. The best thing I can say about this book is that the cover artwork is good, even if it is somewhat misleading. This book is nothing more than an over-indulgent too-long ramble about the general political history of the 1920's & 1930's.
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