Fr. 140.00

Popular Culture and Workingclass Taste in Britain, 193039 - A Round of Cheap Diversions?

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Robert James is Senior Lecturer in Cultural and Social History at the University of Portsmouth Klappentext This is a landmark study which examines the film and reading tastes of working-class consumers in 1930s Britain. Drawing on a wealth of original research, Robert James argues that working-class consumers used popular film and fiction to answer a range of cultural and social needs in this tumultuous decade. Zusammenfassung This is a landmark study which examines the film and reading tastes of working-class consumers in 1930s Britain. Drawing on a wealth of original research! Robert James argues that working-class consumers used popular film and fiction to answer a range of cultural and social needs in this tumultuous decade. -- . Inhaltsverzeichnis DedicationAcknowledgementsContentsIntroduction1. 'The people's amusement': The growth in cinema-going and reading habits 2. 'Fouling civilisation'? official attitudes towards popular film and literature3. Trade attitudes towards audience taste4. Working-class tastes: national trends in film popularity5. Working-class tastes: national trends in literature popularity 6. Working-class tastes: South Wales Miners' Institutes7. Working-class tastes: Derby8. Working-class tastes: Portsmouth9. Popular film and literature: textual analysesConclusion: 'Giving the public what it wants'BibliographyAppendices:I Broader patterns of film popularityII Sidney Bernstein questionnaires, 1932 and 1934: Pre-report materialIII Patterns of literature popularity Index

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