Abstract
In one of the most grimly effective depictions of nuclear war, the film Threads (Hines & Jackson, 1984/2005) traces the build-up to and aftermath of a nuclear attack on the United Kingdom. At first barely noticed by the film’s main characters, the media reports of escalating tensions in a distant conflict form a backdrop to the everyday lives and concerns of a young couple and their families in early 1980s Sheffield. The conflict swiftly escalates as the Cold War powers become involved, and when the first nuclear strike occurs one of the most disturbing portrayals of the sheer futility of war begins to unfold. The viewer is left in no doubt that things can never be the same again – not for the film’s principal characters, nor for humanity as a whole. The closing scenes depict a barren and desolate landscape, some 13 years after the war, in which the remaining humans live a brutal husk of a life. In this post-apocalyptic world, communication is reduced to a series of barely recognizable grunts and fragments of words. Language itself has been degraded as all sense of meaningful existence is lost.
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© 2012 Stephen Gibson and Simon Mollan
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Gibson, S., Mollan, S. (2012). Introduction: Representations of Peace and Conflict. In: Gibson, S., Mollan, S. (eds) Representations of Peace and Conflict. Rethinking Political Violence series. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137292254_1
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