Working class fiction: from Chartism to Trainspotting. Haywood, I. Liverpool University Press, Liverpool, 1997. ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0]
Paper doi abstract bibtex There are two periods when working-class fiction achieves a cult status and popular mystique in British culture: the time of rising affluence in the 1950s and 1960s (see chapter 3), and the 1930s. If the motives behind the attentions of the later period are primarily socially and culturally based, the imperatives of the interwar years are economic and political. Britain entered the post-First World War era in a far from triumphalist mood. Over a million casualties had been inflicted (there are few English villages which do not have a war memorial inscribed with the names of the dead). As was
@book{haywood_working_1997,
address = {Liverpool},
title = {Working class fiction: from {Chartism} to {Trainspotting}},
isbn = {978-0-7463-0785-4},
shorttitle = {Black {Earth}},
url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv5rf3tm.6},
abstract = {There are two periods when working-class fiction achieves a cult status and popular mystique in British culture: the time of rising affluence in the 1950s and 1960s (see chapter 3), and the 1930s. If the motives behind the attentions of the later period are primarily socially and culturally based, the imperatives of the interwar years are economic and political. Britain entered the post-First World War era in a far from triumphalist mood. Over a million casualties had been inflicted (there are few English villages which do not have a war memorial inscribed with the names of the dead). As was},
urldate = {2019-06-03},
publisher = {Liverpool University Press},
author = {Haywood, Ian},
year = {1997},
doi = {10.2307/j.ctv5rf3tm.6},
note = {ZSCC: NoCitationData[s0] }
}
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