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The long resolution? Responding to economic and social change in postwar South Wales

Aled Singleton Orcid Logo

Soundings, Volume: 84, Issue: 84, Pages: 212 - 224

Swansea University Author: Aled Singleton Orcid Logo

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Abstract

This article investigates the period between the late-1950s and the mid-1970s, a time when millions of people in Britain moved from towns and older industrial settlements to the urban periphery. South Wales offers a particularly interesting perspective as many moves were within twenty miles and seem...

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Published in: Soundings
ISSN: 1362-6620 1362-6620
Published: London Lawrence and Wishart 2023
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa65188
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first_indexed 2023-12-03T10:19:46Z
last_indexed 2023-12-03T10:19:46Z
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spelling v2 65188 2023-12-03 The long resolution? Responding to economic and social change in postwar South Wales de05fcd0fb401bfcdef0b5c7fcf422f1 0000-0002-1302-3776 Aled Singleton Aled Singleton true false 2023-12-03 SGE This article investigates the period between the late-1950s and the mid-1970s, a time when millions of people in Britain moved from towns and older industrial settlements to the urban periphery. South Wales offers a particularly interesting perspective as many moves were within twenty miles and seemed to be driven by high levels of state investment in industry, housing, and road infrastructure. This writing aims to examine the long-term impact of these decisions on later generations and to demonstrate the determination - or will – of political actors in Wales, often competing with other places. As well as adapting the well-known Raymond Williams work Long Revolution for my title, I use his structure of feeling concept to seek an understanding of how change was experienced. This is achieved by presenting four recent interview accounts gathered from people who lived in South Wales in the first three decades after World Ward Two. Journal Article Soundings 84 84 212 224 Lawrence and Wishart London 1362-6620 1362-6620 structure of feeling, post-war, regeneration, economic development, south wales 10 10 2023 2023-10-10 10.3898/soun.84-85.13.2023 http://dx.doi.org/10.3898/soun.84-85.13.2023 COLLEGE NANME Geography COLLEGE CODE SGE Swansea University Other Economic and Social Research Council Grant ES/W007568/1 and Swansea University Economic and Social Research Council Fellowship Grant ES/W007568/1 2024-04-03T15:11:19.2613235 2023-12-03T10:06:31.4742655 College of Science Geography Aled Singleton 0000-0002-1302-3776 1 65188__29167__45628a87992748f4bb1a6422e8fad7f0.pdf The Long Resolution. Responding to economic and social change in postwar South Wales .docx 2023-12-03T10:18:59.7090010 Output 55803 application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document Accepted Manuscript true Author accepted manuscript document released under the terms of a Creative Commons CC-BY licence using the Swansea University Research Publications Policy. true eng https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
title The long resolution? Responding to economic and social change in postwar South Wales
spellingShingle The long resolution? Responding to economic and social change in postwar South Wales
Aled Singleton
title_short The long resolution? Responding to economic and social change in postwar South Wales
title_full The long resolution? Responding to economic and social change in postwar South Wales
title_fullStr The long resolution? Responding to economic and social change in postwar South Wales
title_full_unstemmed The long resolution? Responding to economic and social change in postwar South Wales
title_sort The long resolution? Responding to economic and social change in postwar South Wales
author_id_str_mv de05fcd0fb401bfcdef0b5c7fcf422f1
author_id_fullname_str_mv de05fcd0fb401bfcdef0b5c7fcf422f1_***_Aled Singleton
author Aled Singleton
author2 Aled Singleton
format Journal article
container_title Soundings
container_volume 84
container_issue 84
container_start_page 212
publishDate 2023
institution Swansea University
issn 1362-6620
1362-6620
doi_str_mv 10.3898/soun.84-85.13.2023
publisher Lawrence and Wishart
college_str College of Science
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hierarchy_top_title College of Science
hierarchy_parent_id collegeofscience
hierarchy_parent_title College of Science
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url http://dx.doi.org/10.3898/soun.84-85.13.2023
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description This article investigates the period between the late-1950s and the mid-1970s, a time when millions of people in Britain moved from towns and older industrial settlements to the urban periphery. South Wales offers a particularly interesting perspective as many moves were within twenty miles and seemed to be driven by high levels of state investment in industry, housing, and road infrastructure. This writing aims to examine the long-term impact of these decisions on later generations and to demonstrate the determination - or will – of political actors in Wales, often competing with other places. As well as adapting the well-known Raymond Williams work Long Revolution for my title, I use his structure of feeling concept to seek an understanding of how change was experienced. This is achieved by presenting four recent interview accounts gathered from people who lived in South Wales in the first three decades after World Ward Two.
published_date 2023-10-10T15:11:15Z
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