The wartime period in Britain is viewed as an extremely fertile period of British creativity in music film and art. Often these projects were funded and supported by the government who understood its role as a custodian of British culture and by extension of British values at a time where those values were under threat. In the late 1930s the Nazi Party had stressed the superiority of Germanic culture and the promotion of Richard Wagner and Carl Orff was central to Hitler's cultural program. In Britain the War Office under Winston Churchill chose to promote Edward Elgar and Hubert Parry but also to appropriate and 'de-Nazify' Ludwig van Beethoven whose Fifth Symphony was used extensively in wartime broadcasts and has since become synonymous with VE Day. Meanwhile the work of Ralph Vaughn Williams whose music was commissioned by Powell and Pressburger for use in 49th Parallel reclaimed a particularly English past stretching back to the Tudors.<br/><br/>While artists such as John Piper Eric Ravillious and Evelyn Dunbar produced works specifically commissioned by the state which were intended to commemorate and glorify Britain the British Council and the BBC played an active role in commissioning and broadcasting their musical equivalents. In film Humphrey Jenning's documentaries were designed to further push the wartime agenda along with films produced by Ealing Studios. Using detailed archival research John Morris sheds new light on wartime Britain and provides essential reading for historians musicians film scholars and propaganda analysts of this period.
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