Britain in the 1980s was a polarized nation. With the two main political parties as far apart as at any time since the 1930s the period was riven by violent confrontation beginning with the explosion of rioting that rocked Englands cities in 1981 & again in 1985; a year-long fight with the National Union of Mineworkers & then with print workers in Wapping. There was the war to retake the Falkland Islands & the re-escalation of the troubles in Northern Ireland which began with hunger strikes & peaked with the attempt to assassinate the entire Cabinet in the Brighton bombing. It was also a decade of political innovation
- in the life & death of the Social Democratic Party the mass privatization of state-owned industries the sale of council houses & the deregulation of financial markets
- & cultural ferment with the rise & fall of indie pop the emergence of house music Channel 4 & the growth of alternative comedy; & Prince Charless interventions on architecture. Graham Stewarts magnificent & comprehensive history of the eighties covers all these events & many more with exhilarating verve & detail & also examines the legacy of a decade that sowed the seeds of modern Britain.