It is a commonplace that the British remember the Second World War too much, and that this nourishes a myth of superiority. Some on both Right and Left take this view, the latter because of instinctive anti-nationalism, the former from a desire to ‘modernise’. I rather doubt the commonplace view is true.
No one, as far as I am aware, has ever tried to make a serious comparison between the prominence of the war in the cultures of the countries involved, but the British public are not greatly interested, except perhaps as a backdrop to costume drama. There is, certainly, a niche market for popular military history, but whether greater here than in the United States, Russia or France, for example, I could not say.
There is, however, a particular element in British memory of the war, whatever the genre, that is rather unusual: far from being self-glorifying or triumphalist, it tends to be self-deprecating and pessimistic. The most popular theme is the crisis of 1940, as illustrated by acclaimed recent films (the first of their kind for decades) on Dunkirk and on Churchill.
Here the story is one of bare survival, starkly drawn. We have only to think of comparable Hollywood productions over the decades – The Longest Day, Saving Private Ryan, Band of Brothers – to see a difference. Their focus is on the march to victory, in which British participation, if it is represented at all, is minimised.
One strand of British popular memory assumes that after managing to survive 1940, Britain, exhausted and perhaps disheartened, stepped back and left the real effort to Russia and America. Following the apotheosis of the Battle of Britain, the often-told story is of a succession of humiliating defeats: Greece, Crete, Singapore. As one MP lamented at the time in his diary: “Why is it that we can never win any battle at all? A whisper is going around that our troops do not fight well.”
This is the real British myth of the Second World War. What is the reality? Britain, and of course the Empire, continued to make immense economic and military efforts throughout the war: an unparalleled level of civilian mobilization, as well as more than five million in the armed forces by 1945 serving from Denmark to China.
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