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  • Broschiertes Buch

By the end of the notorious 1984/5 miners' strike, many wanted to forget their painful experiences. 30 years on, people are ready to look back and talk about what happened. This carefully compiled book presents some of their stories. Beverley Trounce and Charlie Cibor, a librarian from a mining family and an ex-miner and activist, have interviewed a number of the people directly affected by the strike 30 years ago. Their research covers many topics and the book considers variously the pickets, the collieries, the matter of simple survival through the extreme and grinding poverty of the time,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
By the end of the notorious 1984/5 miners' strike, many wanted to forget their painful experiences. 30 years on, people are ready to look back and talk about what happened. This carefully compiled book presents some of their stories. Beverley Trounce and Charlie Cibor, a librarian from a mining family and an ex-miner and activist, have interviewed a number of the people directly affected by the strike 30 years ago. Their research covers many topics and the book considers variously the pickets, the collieries, the matter of simple survival through the extreme and grinding poverty of the time, the effects on the women and children involved, and the wider community, as well as the aftermath, moving on, and what its legacy means to people today.
Autorenporträt
Beverley Trounce is a qualified librarian and archivist. During the 1980s she worked in a coal-mining area in Nottinghamshire where she witnessed the hardships endured by miners. Charlie Cibor was a Yorkshire miner during the 1984--1985 strikes.