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Zusatztext a brief but fascianting picture of British puritanism at work in the decade between 1955 and 1965 ... Dr Aldgate tells the story very well. Informationen zum Autor Anthony Aldgate is Senior Lecturer in History and Sub Dean in Arts at The Open University, Visiting Professor at the University of Luton, and Associate Tutor at Rewley House, Oxford.He is author of Cinema and History: British Newsreels and the Spanish Civil War (Scolar Press, London, 1979); Best of British: Cinema and Society, 1930-1970 (Blackwell, 1983; Barnes & Noble, Totowa, NJ, 1983); Britain Can Take It: The British Cinema in the Second World War (Blackwell, 1986), to be revised and expanded in 1994 by Edinburgh UP; The Common Touch: The Films of John Baxter (BFI, 1989); Between Two Wars (Open UP, 1990); World War II and Its Consequences (Open UP, 1990). Klappentext Stage or film presentations of Look Back in Anger! A Taste of Honey! Saturday Night and Sunday Morning! Alfie! and Darling were much changed! even transformed! by censorship between 1955-1965. Indeed! censorship altered the progression of the artistic and creative renaissance of the period! and John Osborne! Shelagh Delaney! Alan Sillitoe! Tony Richardson! Lindsay Anderson! and John Schlesinger are just a few of the people who were forced to change their work. Censorship and the Permissive Society explores the predicament writers and directors faced! and highlights the debate over the liberalizing or progressive aspects of the sea changes affecting British society at the time. Zusammenfassung Stage or film presentations of productions such as "Look Back in Anger" and "A Taste of Honey" were drastically changed by censorship between 1955 and 1965. This book explores the predicament writers and directors faced and the effects increasing social liberalization had on censorship.