- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This volume examines the transformations in British literature and culture over the last forty years. Each chapter concentrates on a facet of British culture over the last half century from painting to poetry, from the seriousness of the novel to the postmodern ironies of the computing age.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- The Cambridge Companion to Modern Arab Culture38,99 €
- The Experience of Disaster in Early Modern English Literature123,99 €
- Daisy MurrayTwins in Early Modern English Drama and Shakespeare37,99 €
- Mary Ellen LambThe Popular Culture of Shakespeare, Spenser and Jonson49,99 €
- Sexuality and Memory in Early Modern England63,99 €
- Kaye McLellandViolent Liminalities in Early Modern Culture181,99 €
- Anthony BatemanCricket, Literature and Culture79,99 €
-
-
-
This volume examines the transformations in British literature and culture over the last forty years. Each chapter concentrates on a facet of British culture over the last half century from painting to poetry, from the seriousness of the novel to the postmodern ironies of the computing age.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Pearson Education Limited
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Januar 2000
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 216mm x 140mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 368g
- ISBN-13: 9780582075528
- ISBN-10: 0582075521
- Artikelnr.: 39292777
- Verlag: Pearson Education Limited
- Seitenzahl: 304
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. Januar 2000
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 216mm x 140mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 368g
- ISBN-13: 9780582075528
- ISBN-10: 0582075521
- Artikelnr.: 39292777
Clive Bloom is a reader in English and American Studies at Middlesex University. He is the author and editor of many books on popular literature and culture, recipient of literary awards from the Horror Writers Association and the International Horror Guild, and a nominee for the British Library Association. Gary Day is a principal lecturer and subject leader of English at De Montfort University. He is the author of Re-reading Leavis- 'Culture' and Literary Criticism and of a forthcoming book, Class. He is also the editor of a number of books on literature and culture.
Acknowledgements Series Preface List of Contributors Chronology
Introduction Gary Day Econornic and social policy Culture Conclusion 1.
British Poetry 1956-99 Jessíca Maynard The poetics of cliché Chance
encounters: Larkin, Tornlinson Metamorphoses: Fisher, Clark
Autobiographies: Betjeman, Bunting, Prynne Two varieties of irony 2. Novel
Voices Steven Eamshaw Rogue males Lone voices From the rniddle-brow to the
high forehead: women-centred fiction The dark gods Empire Experimental
literature Genre fiction The postmodem 'There's no such thing as society ..
.' Martin Arnis Voice projections Líterature and Culture in Modern Britain:
1956-99 3. Popular Fiction Michael Hayes Market stall to global market
Fictions galo re Consuming passions Popular fiction: The Legacy 4. Lifting
the Lid: Theatre 1956-99 Michael Woolf Prologue What is 'theatre'? Beyond
censorship Lost Edens: politics and nostalgia A humanist theatre The music
hall Joe Orton and the outrage of Mrs Edna Welthorpe The presence of Harold
Pinter Ayckboum: a singular exception Conclusion: theatre and the segmented
society 5. British Newspapers Nicho/as Rance 'A dreadful, long-running
detective story': reporting the case of the Y orkshire Ripper Conclusion 6.
British Cinema: A Struggle for Identity Lez Cooke 143 The British 'new
wave' The social problem film Harnmer horror: the retum of the repressed
Carry On and the 'camivalesque' The Empire strikes back? 'Swinging London'
The 1970s: mainstream decline and the rise of independent cinema British
cinema and Thatcherism The British film renaissance of the 1990s 7.
Television Lez Cooke The impact of ITV on the BBC The 'Golden Age' of
British television British television in the 1970s: a mirror to society?
The 1980s: Channel 4, competition and deregulation British television in
the 1990s 8. British Art David Masters The avant-garde moves home: Paris to
New York 'The situation in London now' Abstraction - a new realism? 206
...and the situation in St Ives 208 IG, TIT and pop 209 Later pop 210
Challenging modernism: artists with attitude 212 When concept replaced the
unique art object 215 A crisis of modernity? The emergence of postmodernism
and anti-modernism 217 'Nostalgia for the unattainable' 218 Some went mad o
o o some ran away 219 9. Popular Music since the 1950s Andrew Blake 224
Popular music before pop 224 Aspects of amateurism: folk roots and r 'n' b
226 Professionalism and pop 227 The 1960s and after 228 The ambivalence of
broadcasting 230 y outh and music 231 The urban soundscape 233 Let's mix
again 235 10. Technology 1956-99 John Moms 239 What is technology and where
is it taking us? 239 The information explosion 242 Genetic engineering 246
Outcomes of the high techo process 252 Final thoughts 255 11. Epilogue and
Overture Clive Bloom The role of the university Criticism at the end of the
century N ew and future approaches British culture at the Millennium Index
Introduction Gary Day Econornic and social policy Culture Conclusion 1.
British Poetry 1956-99 Jessíca Maynard The poetics of cliché Chance
encounters: Larkin, Tornlinson Metamorphoses: Fisher, Clark
Autobiographies: Betjeman, Bunting, Prynne Two varieties of irony 2. Novel
Voices Steven Eamshaw Rogue males Lone voices From the rniddle-brow to the
high forehead: women-centred fiction The dark gods Empire Experimental
literature Genre fiction The postmodem 'There's no such thing as society ..
.' Martin Arnis Voice projections Líterature and Culture in Modern Britain:
1956-99 3. Popular Fiction Michael Hayes Market stall to global market
Fictions galo re Consuming passions Popular fiction: The Legacy 4. Lifting
the Lid: Theatre 1956-99 Michael Woolf Prologue What is 'theatre'? Beyond
censorship Lost Edens: politics and nostalgia A humanist theatre The music
hall Joe Orton and the outrage of Mrs Edna Welthorpe The presence of Harold
Pinter Ayckboum: a singular exception Conclusion: theatre and the segmented
society 5. British Newspapers Nicho/as Rance 'A dreadful, long-running
detective story': reporting the case of the Y orkshire Ripper Conclusion 6.
British Cinema: A Struggle for Identity Lez Cooke 143 The British 'new
wave' The social problem film Harnmer horror: the retum of the repressed
Carry On and the 'camivalesque' The Empire strikes back? 'Swinging London'
The 1970s: mainstream decline and the rise of independent cinema British
cinema and Thatcherism The British film renaissance of the 1990s 7.
Television Lez Cooke The impact of ITV on the BBC The 'Golden Age' of
British television British television in the 1970s: a mirror to society?
The 1980s: Channel 4, competition and deregulation British television in
the 1990s 8. British Art David Masters The avant-garde moves home: Paris to
New York 'The situation in London now' Abstraction - a new realism? 206
...and the situation in St Ives 208 IG, TIT and pop 209 Later pop 210
Challenging modernism: artists with attitude 212 When concept replaced the
unique art object 215 A crisis of modernity? The emergence of postmodernism
and anti-modernism 217 'Nostalgia for the unattainable' 218 Some went mad o
o o some ran away 219 9. Popular Music since the 1950s Andrew Blake 224
Popular music before pop 224 Aspects of amateurism: folk roots and r 'n' b
226 Professionalism and pop 227 The 1960s and after 228 The ambivalence of
broadcasting 230 y outh and music 231 The urban soundscape 233 Let's mix
again 235 10. Technology 1956-99 John Moms 239 What is technology and where
is it taking us? 239 The information explosion 242 Genetic engineering 246
Outcomes of the high techo process 252 Final thoughts 255 11. Epilogue and
Overture Clive Bloom The role of the university Criticism at the end of the
century N ew and future approaches British culture at the Millennium Index
Acknowledgements Series Preface List of Contributors Chronology
Introduction Gary Day Econornic and social policy Culture Conclusion 1.
British Poetry 1956-99 Jessíca Maynard The poetics of cliché Chance
encounters: Larkin, Tornlinson Metamorphoses: Fisher, Clark
Autobiographies: Betjeman, Bunting, Prynne Two varieties of irony 2. Novel
Voices Steven Eamshaw Rogue males Lone voices From the rniddle-brow to the
high forehead: women-centred fiction The dark gods Empire Experimental
literature Genre fiction The postmodem 'There's no such thing as society ..
.' Martin Arnis Voice projections Líterature and Culture in Modern Britain:
1956-99 3. Popular Fiction Michael Hayes Market stall to global market
Fictions galo re Consuming passions Popular fiction: The Legacy 4. Lifting
the Lid: Theatre 1956-99 Michael Woolf Prologue What is 'theatre'? Beyond
censorship Lost Edens: politics and nostalgia A humanist theatre The music
hall Joe Orton and the outrage of Mrs Edna Welthorpe The presence of Harold
Pinter Ayckboum: a singular exception Conclusion: theatre and the segmented
society 5. British Newspapers Nicho/as Rance 'A dreadful, long-running
detective story': reporting the case of the Y orkshire Ripper Conclusion 6.
British Cinema: A Struggle for Identity Lez Cooke 143 The British 'new
wave' The social problem film Harnmer horror: the retum of the repressed
Carry On and the 'camivalesque' The Empire strikes back? 'Swinging London'
The 1970s: mainstream decline and the rise of independent cinema British
cinema and Thatcherism The British film renaissance of the 1990s 7.
Television Lez Cooke The impact of ITV on the BBC The 'Golden Age' of
British television British television in the 1970s: a mirror to society?
The 1980s: Channel 4, competition and deregulation British television in
the 1990s 8. British Art David Masters The avant-garde moves home: Paris to
New York 'The situation in London now' Abstraction - a new realism? 206
...and the situation in St Ives 208 IG, TIT and pop 209 Later pop 210
Challenging modernism: artists with attitude 212 When concept replaced the
unique art object 215 A crisis of modernity? The emergence of postmodernism
and anti-modernism 217 'Nostalgia for the unattainable' 218 Some went mad o
o o some ran away 219 9. Popular Music since the 1950s Andrew Blake 224
Popular music before pop 224 Aspects of amateurism: folk roots and r 'n' b
226 Professionalism and pop 227 The 1960s and after 228 The ambivalence of
broadcasting 230 y outh and music 231 The urban soundscape 233 Let's mix
again 235 10. Technology 1956-99 John Moms 239 What is technology and where
is it taking us? 239 The information explosion 242 Genetic engineering 246
Outcomes of the high techo process 252 Final thoughts 255 11. Epilogue and
Overture Clive Bloom The role of the university Criticism at the end of the
century N ew and future approaches British culture at the Millennium Index
Introduction Gary Day Econornic and social policy Culture Conclusion 1.
British Poetry 1956-99 Jessíca Maynard The poetics of cliché Chance
encounters: Larkin, Tornlinson Metamorphoses: Fisher, Clark
Autobiographies: Betjeman, Bunting, Prynne Two varieties of irony 2. Novel
Voices Steven Eamshaw Rogue males Lone voices From the rniddle-brow to the
high forehead: women-centred fiction The dark gods Empire Experimental
literature Genre fiction The postmodem 'There's no such thing as society ..
.' Martin Arnis Voice projections Líterature and Culture in Modern Britain:
1956-99 3. Popular Fiction Michael Hayes Market stall to global market
Fictions galo re Consuming passions Popular fiction: The Legacy 4. Lifting
the Lid: Theatre 1956-99 Michael Woolf Prologue What is 'theatre'? Beyond
censorship Lost Edens: politics and nostalgia A humanist theatre The music
hall Joe Orton and the outrage of Mrs Edna Welthorpe The presence of Harold
Pinter Ayckboum: a singular exception Conclusion: theatre and the segmented
society 5. British Newspapers Nicho/as Rance 'A dreadful, long-running
detective story': reporting the case of the Y orkshire Ripper Conclusion 6.
British Cinema: A Struggle for Identity Lez Cooke 143 The British 'new
wave' The social problem film Harnmer horror: the retum of the repressed
Carry On and the 'camivalesque' The Empire strikes back? 'Swinging London'
The 1970s: mainstream decline and the rise of independent cinema British
cinema and Thatcherism The British film renaissance of the 1990s 7.
Television Lez Cooke The impact of ITV on the BBC The 'Golden Age' of
British television British television in the 1970s: a mirror to society?
The 1980s: Channel 4, competition and deregulation British television in
the 1990s 8. British Art David Masters The avant-garde moves home: Paris to
New York 'The situation in London now' Abstraction - a new realism? 206
...and the situation in St Ives 208 IG, TIT and pop 209 Later pop 210
Challenging modernism: artists with attitude 212 When concept replaced the
unique art object 215 A crisis of modernity? The emergence of postmodernism
and anti-modernism 217 'Nostalgia for the unattainable' 218 Some went mad o
o o some ran away 219 9. Popular Music since the 1950s Andrew Blake 224
Popular music before pop 224 Aspects of amateurism: folk roots and r 'n' b
226 Professionalism and pop 227 The 1960s and after 228 The ambivalence of
broadcasting 230 y outh and music 231 The urban soundscape 233 Let's mix
again 235 10. Technology 1956-99 John Moms 239 What is technology and where
is it taking us? 239 The information explosion 242 Genetic engineering 246
Outcomes of the high techo process 252 Final thoughts 255 11. Epilogue and
Overture Clive Bloom The role of the university Criticism at the end of the
century N ew and future approaches British culture at the Millennium Index