The Empire strikes out - an American perspective on the British film industry, Lester Friedman. Part 1 cultural contexts and cinematic constructions: the religion of the market - Thatcherite politics and the British film of the 1980s, Leonard Quart; the last new wave - modernism in the British films of the Thatcher era, Peter Wollen; images for sale - the "New" British cinema, Thomas Elsaesser; history with holes - channel four television films of the 1980s, Paul Giles; the repression of communities - visual representations of Northern Ireland, Brian McIlroy; re-presenting the national past - nostalgia and pastiche in the heritage films, Andrew Higson; free from the apron strings - representations of mothers in the maternal British state, Mary Desjardins. Part 2 Filmmakers during the Thatcher era: power and territory - the emergence of Black British film collectives, Manthia Diawara; women's independent cinema - the case of Leeds Animation Workshop, Antonia Lant; the body politic - Ken Russell in the 1980s, Barry Keith Grant; "everyone's an American now" - Thatcherist ideology in the films of Nicolas Roeg and Jim Leach; insurmountable difficulties and moments of ecstasy - crossing class, ethnic, and sexual barriers in the films of Stephen Frears and Susan Torrey Barber; the masochistic fix - gender oppression in the films of Terence Davies and Tony Williams; allegories of Thatcherism - the films of Peter Greenaway Michael Walsh; private practice, public health - the politics of sickness and the films of Derek Jarman, Chris Lippard and Guy Johnson.