Literature of the 1950s: Good, Brave Causes

Volume 6

Alice Ferrebe author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Edinburgh University Press

Published:10th Apr '12

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Literature of the 1950s: Good, Brave Causes cover

Challenges the myths about apathy and smugness surrounding British literature of the period. Alice Ferrebe's lively study rereads the decade and its literature as crucial in twentieth-century British history for its emergent and increasingly complicated politics of difference, as ideas about identity, authority and belonging were tested and contested. By placing a diverse selection of texts alongside those of the established canon of Movement and 'Angry' writing, a literary culture of true diversity and depth is brought into view. The volume characterises the 1950s as a time of confrontation with a range of concerns still avidly debated today, including immigration, education, the challenging behaviour of youth, nuclear threat, the post-industrial and post-imperial legacy, a consumerist economy and a feminist movement hampered by the perceivedly comprehensive nature of its recent success. Contrary to Jimmy Porter's defeatist judgement on his era in John Osborne's 1956 play Look Back in Anger, the volume upholds such concerns as 'good, brave causes' indeed.

< -- Dominic Sandbrook, author of Never Had It So Good: A History of Britain from Suez to the Beatles
Shrewd, lucid and perceptive, Alice Ferrebe’s splendid book shows how the supposedly greyest of post-war decades was, in fact, an age of tremendous imagination, diversity and confrontation. From Amis and Larkin to Osborne and Fleming, Ferrebe brings new life to the literary world of the 1950s. -- Dominic Sandbrook, author of Never Had It So Good: A History of Britain from Suez to the Beatles

ISBN: 9780748627714

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 547g

256 pages