ABSTRACT

Exploring the role of museums, galleries and curators during the upheaval of the Second World War, this book challenges the accepted view of a hiatus in museum services during the conflict and its immediate aftermath. Instead it argues that new thinking in the 1930s was realised in a number of promising initiatives during the war only to fail during the fragmented post-war recovery. Based on new research including interviews with retired museum staff, letters, diaries, museum archives and government records, this study reveals a complex picture of both innovation and inertia.

At the outbreak of war precious objects were stored away and staff numbers reduced, but although many museums were closed, others successfully campaigned to remain open. By providing innovative modern exhibitions and education initiatives they became popular and valued venues for the public. After the war, however, museums returned to their more traditional, collections-centred approach and failed to negotiate the public funding needed for reconstruction based on this narrower view of their role. Hence, in the longer term, the destruction and economic and social consequences of the conflict served to delay aspirations for reconstruction until the 1960s. Through this lens, the history of the museum in the mid-twentieth century appears as one shaped by the effects of war but equally determined by the input of curators, audiences and the state. The museum thus emerges not as an isolated institution concerned only with presenting the past but as a product of the changing conflicts and cultures within society.

chapter |4 pages

Timeline

Major events around the Second World War and the Home Front

chapter |15 pages

Introduction

A new perspective

part I|39 pages

1918–1939

chapter 1|12 pages

Between the wars

Museums and cultural politics

chapter 2|8 pages

Charting progress

The Markham Report

chapter 3|15 pages

Museums before the war

The context for reform

part II|26 pages

1939–1940

chapter 4|12 pages

Confronting conflict

Collections, closings and openings

chapter 5|12 pages

As war begins

From propaganda to recognition

part III|37 pages

1940–1944

chapter 6|11 pages

State support

The Council for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts (CEMA)

chapter 7|15 pages

Temples to the arts

chapter 8|9 pages

Planning for peacetime

part IV|69 pages

Reflections on wartime practice

chapter 10|23 pages

Audiences in wartime

chapter 11|13 pages

Memory and identity

chapter 12|13 pages

Museum staff and the war

part V|29 pages

The aftermath of the war

chapter 13|8 pages

A national museum service

The final bid

chapter 14|19 pages

The post-war decades

Museums in the aftermath of war

part VI|36 pages

From austerity to reconstruction

chapter 15|20 pages

Towards a regional service

chapter |14 pages

Conclusions

Museums forget their past