Some decades coincide with historical periods, give or take a year or two. The Twenties were self-contained as the era between the Great War and the world slump, and the Thirties a loaded pause between one catastrophe and the next. But the Seventies had no separate identity. Recognising this, Phillip Whitehead begins his book - written to accompany the Channel 4 series of the same name - with the euphoria of Harold Wilson's victory in 1964. He ends in 1981 with the 'drying-out of the wets' by Mrs Thatcher in her autumn reshuffle. The underlying theme, if only a whisper in the reader's ear, is plain enough: the erosion of the post-war state, the collapse of consensus politics, the descent of Labour into the abyss. Or to sum it all up - decline and fall.
LRB 23 January 1986 | PDF Download
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