The Less Secret State

Peter Hennessy looks back to his 1994 Longman-History Today lecture, delivered just as a revolution in British contemporary history was beginning to bear fruit.

(Left to right) Peter Hennessy delivering his 1994 lecture, with then editor of History Today, Gordon Marsden, and Andrew MacLennan of Longman in attendance.Revisiting my 1994 lecture on The Pleasures and Pains of Contemporary History is pure pleasure. Why? Because, though I scarcely sensed it at the time, we historians of post-1945 Britain, especially those of us with an itch to reconstruct the Cold War secret state successive British governments constructed from the late Forties to the late Eighties, were on the rim of a boom.

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