skip to main content

You Are Here: Writing the Century / About the series
 
Writing The Century
 

About the series

 
People with rations
People with rations

Pen pictures

Discover the people behind the pen - a little more about the diarists.

Hazel Wheeler's diaries

What do you look for in a person's writing? It's often the small things which reveal the most. Get an insight to the past by exploring with Hazel.

Linton Andrews' diaries

As editor of the Yorkshire Post, Linton Andrews' diaries give an invaluable insight, find out more by exploring with Linton.

Writing the Century provides an insight into the twentieth century through the lives of ordinary people.

Focusing on an individual’s experience helps in understanding how social change and national and world events affect them.

There is a natural fascination in reading other people’s diaries and letters; they provide an intimate insight into another world. But, as Writing the Century demonstrates, everything is not exactly as we collectively remember it!

The late 1940s and 1950s were a significant historical period. The war had just ended and people were entering unchartered territory. The Cold War was unfolding, the sun was setting on the British Empire, and Britain was still trying to find its place in the new international order.

Despite this, as Writing the Century shows, life went on as before. The ordinary Briton was as much concerned as ever with family concerns, day-to-day living, love, and mortality.

A significant feature of a diary is that writing it can be a cathartic process. Diary entries are personal accounts of everyday life, rarely written with any expectation of them being published.

The level of detail recorded can vary considerably, from simple references to meetings and activities to a more detailed account of events that the individual experiences either directly or indirectly.

Importantly for historians, diaries differ from memoirs, which are written at a later date and are subjected to modification and self-censorship.

Writing the Century combines the skills of creative writing with historical analysis. Each series is from the perspective of an individual person, based on events recorded in their diary for the period in question.

Using the diaries as the basis of the subsequent storyline, the writer seeks to dramatise the recorded events. Additional knowledge and research of the period allows the writer to provide the details that the diary merely hints at. This biographical/autobiographical process is referred to as Life Writing.

Content last updated: 05/02/2009

 

Bookmark with:

  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • Facebook
  • Newsvine
  • NowPublic
  • Reddit
  • Stumbleupon
Please wait while loading. You must have JavaScript enabled to view star ratings.
 

Comments

Please wait while loading. You must have JavaScript enabled to view comments.
 
 

Explore Open2

Penguin

Two members of the Life team go in search of penguins in their natural environment. See what they find on Deception Island.

Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe

Would you say you're a Christian? Share your views, and learn about the views of others, in our new Christianity survey.

Breaking news, 1940s style

Keep up to date with our Twitterfeeds of latest news from Open2 and alerts of OU programmes on the BBC.

 
 

Site info and help