ABSTRACT

Thatcher provides an accessible and scholarly introduction to the personality and career of Britain’s first female political leader and the twentieth century’s longest serving Prime Minister. Providing a balanced narrative and assessment of one of the most significant figures of the post-war era, this new biography examines the reasons why Margaret Thatcher has been admired by many as an architect of national revival, yet loathed by others as the author of widening social and geographical division.

The book begins by examining the making of Margaret Thatcher, her education, the beginning of her political career and her rise through the Conservative Party to her appointment as unexpected leader. Moving on to her tenure as Prime Minister, Graham Goodlad then examines her impact at home and abroad, covering her controversial economic policies and hard line with the trade unions, leadership through the Falklands conflict and during the last decade of the Cold War, and influence on Britain’s relationship with a more closely integrated Europe. Finally, the biography closes with a review of Thatcher’s legacy before and after her death in April 2013, and considers how far she shaped the politics and society of the 1980s and those of our own time.

Thatcher is essential reading for all students of twentieth-century history and politics.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|24 pages

The unexpected leader: 1970–1979

chapter 3|24 pages

The challenges of office: 1979–1982

chapter 5|23 pages

Establishing supremacy: 1982–1985

chapter 6|24 pages

Pinnacle of power: 1985–1988

chapter 8|24 pages

Between the superpowers: 1979–1990

chapter 10|22 pages

Decline and fall: 1988–1990

chapter 11|12 pages

Life after political death: 1990–2013

chapter 12|23 pages

The Thatcher legacy