In recent years, historians have debated fervently on the reason for the decline of British Labour History as an academic discipline. Most certainly the challenge of Thatcherism to the working classes and trade unions in the 1980s, and the fragmentation of Labour history into gender studies, industrial studies and women's history, have contributed to its apparent decline. Post-modernists' challenges to the concept of class, culture and community have done their damage. As a result Labour history, in its broad-school sense, has been taught less and less in British universities. Yet it survives...
In recent years, historians have debated fervently on the reason for the decline of British Labour History as an academic discipline. Most certainly t...