1951-64: emergence of the teenager and changing social attitudes and tensions Flashcards

1
Q

Describe why young girls increasingly had more time.

A

New labour-saving devices meant that girls did not need to help their bothers at home as much.

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2
Q

Describe why young boys increasingly had more time.

A

Boys no longer had to take part in National Service after 1960.

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3
Q

Why were the new young generation different to their parents?

A

They dressed differently to their parents, listened to different music, went to the new coffee bars rather than the old tea houses.

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4
Q

What had swelled the number of teenagers?

A

The post-war baby boom. One survey in 1959 about the lives of teenagers estimated that there were 5 million teenagers in Britain, about 10% of the population - made them more visible and economically important.

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5
Q

How did media relate to the youth?

A

They had money to buy records and fashion, helping to create their own culture. By the late 1950s there were magazines and TV programmes aimed specifically at this group.

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6
Q

What helped to spread the youth culture?

A

Changes in technology like the transistor radio.

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7
Q

What was the most obvious youth subculture in the early 1950s?

A

The Teddy boys, who were seen as a worrying phenomenon and were linked with juvenile delinquency and rising crime.

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8
Q

Where was there notable crime between the youth subcultures?

A

Organised riots in Clacton, Margate and Brighton in May 1964 between Mods and Rockers. The fighting went on for 2 days in Brighton and police struggled to restore order.

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9
Q

Give evidence to suggest that tensions in society were reflected in popular film and novels.

A
  • Racial tension was the theme of Sapphire, a 1959 crime thriller with a then rather daring portrayal of sex and violence.
  • Gang violence was chillingly portrayed in A Clockwork Orange in 1962
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10
Q

How did television also contribute to inform these social issues?

A

Tv produced campaigning programmes designed to raise controversy about social issues, such as Cathy Come Home, a powerful drama about homelessness.

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11
Q

When was the Obscene Publications Act passed and what did it do?

A

1959 - it allowed supposedly obscene work to be published and this is reflected in Lady Chatterly’s Lover in 1962 and Fanny Hill in 1963.

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12
Q

Why was this new permissive culture not universally popular?

A

There was a backlash against the new ‘immorality and depravity’, led by Mary Whitehouse and supported by parts of the national press.

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13
Q

Why was there criticism from the left wing about this change in attitude?

A

The concentration on material affluence had negative effects, undermining the decency in society. In general, the majority opinion in Britain remained socially conservative.

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