Article

"Broken men" and "Thatcher's children": Memory and legacy in Scotland's coalfields

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Citation

Perchard A (2013) "Broken men" and "Thatcher's children": Memory and legacy in Scotland's coalfields. International Labor and Working Class History, 84 (1), pp. 78-98. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0147547913000252

Abstract
This article explores the legacy of the demise of the deep coal mining industry in Scotland. It places particular emphasis on the cultural scars of this process as witnessed through miners' and managers' memories, positioning these within the context of occupational socialization, conflict, and alienation. The piece explores the enduring importance of these cultural scars in shaping broader collective narratives of decline in Scotland, and how responses were manifest in shifting political outlooks and the emergence (at both a local and national level) of a resurgent nationalism from the early 1960s onward. Drawing on the notion of the cultural circuit, the article examines how and why personal experience of the loss of the coal industry informed and conformed to the politics of the miners' union in Scotland, the National Union of Mineworkers Scottish Area (NUMSA). As the article makes clear, the program of closures in the industry has left profound psychological scars in coalfield communities - ones that, like the closure of other major industrial sites, shape a powerful national narrative. Copyright © 2013 International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc.

Journal
International Labor and Working Class History: Volume 84, Issue 1

StatusPublished
FundersThe Royal Society of Edinburgh
Publication date31/10/2013
Publication date online07/01/2014
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/27827
PublisherCambridge University Press
ISSN0147-5479
eISSN1471-6445

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