Not Like Home

American Visitors to Britain in the 1950s

By Michael John Law
Series: McGill-Queen's Transatlantic Studies
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773558830, 256 pages, August 2019
Paperback : 9780773558847, 256 pages, August 2019
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773559554, August 2019
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780773559561, August 2019

An intriguing account of American tourists and students in Britain during the 1950s and the influence, expectations, and realities of transatlantic encounters.

Description

In the decade of economic expansion following the Second World War, many ordinary Americans travelled abroad for the first time. Those who visited Britain were surprised to find that the people they encountered were not the aristocrats or working-class ciphers they knew from Hollywood movies. Britons' views of Americans were likewise informed by films and by encounters with the American military during the war. Based on over thirty personal accounts of Americans travelling to Britain in the 1950s, Not Like Home examines how direct contact influenced the relationships between these two groups and their attitudes towards each other. Michael John Law explains that prejudice on both sides was replaced by the realities of direct encounters. Painting an evocative portrait of Britain in the 1950s as seen through the eyes of outsiders, Law depicts the characteristics and practices of these American visitors and compares them to their caricatures in British newspapers and magazines. Going to Britain was a transformative experience for most American visitors, providing a link to a shared history and culture. In turn, their arrival influenced British life by providing a reality check on Hollywood's portrayal of American life and through their demands for higher standards in Britain's hotels, restaurants, and trains. Through an engaging narrative incorporating unpublished reports of American visits to Britain, Not Like Home describes the exciting and sometimes confounding mid-century encounters between two very different cultures.

Reviews

“This is a useful book, rich with information, accessible … . It will be fruitfully read by scholars of tourism and travel, historical sociologists, as well as historians concerned with British history, the Atlantic world, and the postwar – all of whom will find it an excellent starting point for future investigations.” Journal of Tourism History

"With its richly multidisciplinary use of travel literature, tourist memoirs, popular music, and cinema, Not Like Home offers readers an engaging and innovative analysis of American tourism to Britain after the Second World War." Clive Webb, University of Sussex