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British Food Journal Volume 81 Issue 6 1979

British Food Journal Volume 81 Issue 6 1979 After great Wars, the years that follow are always times of disquiet and uncertainty the country is shabby and exhausted, but beneath it, there is hope, expectancy, nay certainty, that better times are coming. Perhaps the golden promise of the fifties and sixties failed to mature, but we entered the seventies with most people confident that the country would turn the corner it did but unfortunately not the right one Not inappropriate they have been dubbed the striking seventies. The process was not one of recovery but of slow, relentless deterioration. One way of knowing how your country is going is to visit others. At first, prices were cheaper that at home the went farther and was readily acceptabble, but year by year, it seemed that prices were rising, but it was in truth the falling in value no longer so easily changed. Most thinking Continentals had only a sneer for decadent England. Kinsmen from overseas wanted to think well of us but simply could not understand what was happening. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png British Food Journal Emerald Publishing

British Food Journal Volume 81 Issue 6 1979

British Food Journal , Volume 81 (6): 36 – Jun 1, 1979

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Publisher
Emerald Publishing
Copyright
Copyright © Emerald Group Publishing Limited
ISSN
0007-070X
DOI
10.1108/eb011731
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

After great Wars, the years that follow are always times of disquiet and uncertainty the country is shabby and exhausted, but beneath it, there is hope, expectancy, nay certainty, that better times are coming. Perhaps the golden promise of the fifties and sixties failed to mature, but we entered the seventies with most people confident that the country would turn the corner it did but unfortunately not the right one Not inappropriate they have been dubbed the striking seventies. The process was not one of recovery but of slow, relentless deterioration. One way of knowing how your country is going is to visit others. At first, prices were cheaper that at home the went farther and was readily acceptabble, but year by year, it seemed that prices were rising, but it was in truth the falling in value no longer so easily changed. Most thinking Continentals had only a sneer for decadent England. Kinsmen from overseas wanted to think well of us but simply could not understand what was happening.

Journal

British Food JournalEmerald Publishing

Published: Jun 1, 1979

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