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Superpower Britain

Audiobook
Nonfiction: History
Unabridged   15 hour(s)
Publication date: 07/22/2025

F O R T H C O M I N G ! Available July

Superpower Britain

The 1945 Vision and Why it Failed

Available from major retailers
Digital Download ISBN:9781696619417

Summary

History tells us that the Second World War broke Britain as a great power, diminishing its military strength, ruining its economy, and precipitating a striking wave of decolonization. Nationalists and new superpowers dominated the post-war landscape, and the country was on the slide. But no one knew this in 1945—the leading politicians, the top civil servants, and the most knowledgeable experts, all expected the British Empire to remain intact long into the future. How do we account for the difference between what it was thought would happen and the actual course of events?

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Product Description

History tells us that the Second World War broke Britain as a great power, diminishing its military strength, ruining its economy, and precipitating a striking wave of decolonization. Nationalists and new superpowers dominated the post-war landscape, and the country was on the slide. But no one knew this in 1945—the leading politicians, the top civil servants, and the most knowledgeable experts, all expected the British Empire to remain intact long into the future.

How do we account for the difference between what it was thought would happen and the actual course of events? Superpower Britain is the first book to focus in depth on this fascinating counterpoint and to fully integrate the history of Britain and the effects of the Second World War with the history of the British Empire. It explains what the British planned to do in the post-war world, why they thought their plans for regeneration and the future world order were viable, and what the war had actually done to British world power and its imperial foundations.

Author Bio

Ashley Jackson is professor of imperial and military history at King's College London and a visiting fellow at Kellogg College, Oxford. He studied for postgraduate degrees at New College, Oxford, and spent eight years as a research fellow at Mansfield College, Oxford and a year as a lecturer at Oxford Brookes University. Andrew Stewart is an honorary professor at the Australian National University and visiting professor at King's College London. He is also director of conflict research at the Centre for Historical Analysis and Conflict Research, the British Army's think-tank.