In Diplomacy in Postwar British Literature and Culture, Krzakowski examines how representations of British envoysdiplomats, officials, and spies in fiction and non-fiction by Rebecca West, Lawrence Durrell, Olivia Manning, and John le Carre, as well as in the films of Alfred Hitchcock respond to the political instability of the postwar period. This study argues that the rise of international relations in the twentieth century shaped modern British fiction and film, and offers a new way to trace the continuities between geopolitics and British cultural production in the aftermath of the Second World War.