Liberal/Permissive society- 1918-1979 Flashcards

1
Q
  1. When did rationing end?

2. What did the relaxation of consumer credit mean for the working class?

A
  1. 1954
    • Enabled them to enjoy a level of prosperity that they could scarcely have imagined a decade earlier
      - Ideas of community, social class, and social mobility increasingly challenged; ppl began questioning class system from position of prosperity au lieu poverty, surrounded by comforts of consumer capitalism.
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2
Q
  1. When was the Satire Boom?

2. Why did the Satire Boom happen?

A
  1. Late 1950s-early 1960s

2. Decline of deference

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3
Q

Example of how popular satire became during the Satire Boom

A

1960: Subversive, popular stage show ‘Beyond the Fringe’- played to packed audiences. Fierce controversy for ridiculing the establishment: govt, army + upper classes.

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4
Q

What was a sketch performed in ‘Beyond the Fringe’ that satirised the military?

A

‘The Aftermyth of the War’- poured scorn on war effort, even though it was a recent memory + ppl still proud of win.

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5
Q

What did this sketch that satirised the military and the British war effort lead to?

A

Success led to TV show ‘The Week That Was’ w/David Frost. Satirical humour + interviews of top politicians. 1st time public saw elite politicians interviewed rigorously by journalists. Showed clear change in attitudes to authority.

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6
Q
  1. The ‘British New Wave’ was a loose term for what movement?
  2. What type of fiction was being produced in the late ’50s and early ’60s?
A
  1. A generation of writers + filmmakers that articulated Britain’s changing attitudes to class system.
  2. Many novels about working class men/women coming to terms w/end of old working-class world of pre-war era and birth of new prosperity.
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7
Q

Example of the types of novels being produced in the late 1950s and early 1960s

A

Alan Sillitoe- Saturday Night Sunday Morning (1958). Later made into a film w/Albert Finney in 1960. Both v. popular + showed working-class + old gen deference in decline

  • Angry working class man Arthur Seaton has contempt for bosses, authorities, and even own community.
  • Amoral character desperate to escape background but enjoys all benefits of new consumerism. Not a left-wing working class hero, but product of affluent society.
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8
Q

What events led up to the sex scandal of early 1963?

A

Rumours of sex parties regularly held at stately home owned by Astor family- Cliveden. Satire mag Private Eye important for reporting rumours, but mainstream media latched onto it.

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9
Q

What was the sex scandal of early 1963?

A

Rumour Minister of War John Profumo sharing 19Y/O Christine Keeler w/Soviet attache. He initially denied it but later confessed, resigned in March ‘63. Some ppl believe it led to govt. losing 4 seats in ‘64 Gen. Election.

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10
Q
  1. Before the Profumo scandal, did the press report on such sex scandals?
  2. Who reported on the Profumo scandal?
A
  1. No- sexual indiscretions of the establishment (even royals) routinely ignored by powerful press barons.
  2. Feat. on front pages of the Mirror, News of the World, Daily Express, and Daily Mail.
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11
Q

In terms of social change, what was the significance of the Profumo Scandal?

A

Significant in the decline of deference in society.

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12
Q

Why was the Profumo Scandal significant?

A

Ppl shocked members of establishment indulged in seedy practices + routinely lied about it ‘til caught out. Marked watershed where ppl realised leaders weren’t necessarily paragons of virtue, didn’t deserve trust just due to position

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13
Q

1950s Attitudes towards sex

A
  • Idea state had role in regulating private sex behaviour, esp. gayness, widely accepted
  • By ‘49 >1/10 of ppl had received any sex education
  • Lil evidence that parents discussed sex w/their kids.
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14
Q

A popular view from foreign observers and commentators in the ’50s was that the British were reserved and sexually repressed. Why is this unlikely based on statistics?

A
  • STD cases high in Britain until penicillin discovery
  • Prostitution flourished during WW2
  • ’50s survey: 1/5 women born 1894-1904 had had premarital sex; 1/2 all women born ‘24-45 had premarital sex.
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15
Q

A popular view from foreign observers and commentators in the ’50s was that the British were reserved and sexually repressed. What book disproves this notion?

A

’30s onward there was growing demand for sex advice books. Eustace Chesser’s 1941 book ‘Love Without Fear’ explained both men and women could have sex; sold 3M copies by. 1964

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16
Q

Based on statistics from the 1950s and before, was there a sexual revolution in the 1960s?

A

Could argue we didn’t experience sex revolution in 60s but that sex behaviour had been steadily changing through 1900s. The revolution was in the British Public’s increased openness to discussing sex.

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17
Q

What is the typical mythology about the 1960s?

A

That the decade was one of sexual exploration and decadence. Statistical evidence gathered during the sixties tends to suggest this image is misleading.

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18
Q

What was ‘The Sexual Behaviour of Young People’?

A

Study done by Michael Schofield in 1965- based on interviews w/2,000 teens. Uncovered following:

  • 1 in 3 boys and 1 in 6 girls between 16-19 had had sex
  • Nearly all who had were in established relationships + weren’t promiscuous
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19
Q

What was another study completed in the sixties around sex?

A

1970: Geoffrey Gorer came to similar conclusions to Schofield. In this survey attitudes to sex, marriage, infidelity, contraception, + gays v. similar to popular attitudes of 50s; suggests not much change by 1969.

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20
Q

How did the media participate in the ‘Swinging Sixties’?

A

Papers played big role in dissemination of sex ideas. In age of mass consumerism advertisers paid to have ads in tabloids- knew they’d reach many. Tabloid sex scandals + talking about sex in articles + features not only got big readership but linked sex w/celebrity + consumerism.

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21
Q

Examples of how advertisers participated in the Swinging Sixties

A

Many ads featured sexual allure as a sales technique to sell products.

22
Q

How did tabloid media effect British opinion on sex?

A

Paper reportage of scandals e.g Profumo + Lady Chatterley trial polarised public opinion on sex between those who were shocked/alarmed about rise of ‘permissive’ attitudes and those who embraced the new openness.

23
Q

Who published Lady Chatterley’s Lover by D.H. Lawrence and when?

A
  • Penguin Books

- 1960

24
Q

What was Lady Chatterley’s Lover about?

A

Story of an aristocratic woman who has an affair with her working- class groundsman.

25
Q

What did the government do in response to the publishment of Lady Chatterley’s Lover?

A

Decided to prosecute Penguin under the Obscene Publications Act 1959, which was actually meant to introduce relaxed censorship, enabling a jury to consider ‘literary merit’ when deciding if a book was obscene.

26
Q

What happened in the Lady Chatterley Trial?

A

Jury decided book had sufficient literary merit and found in favour of Penguin. Publicity of case caused sales to soar

27
Q

What did the Lady Chatterley trial demonstrate?

A

That laws around obscenity were outdated + attitude towards sex and morality was changing; many historians regard it as the start of Britain’s ‘permissive society’.

28
Q

What were the results of the Lady Chatterley trial and the end of censorship of books and mags with ‘obscene’ material?

A

Growth of porn industry. Areas like Soho in London became synonymous w/porn shops. Porn was still illegal but Obscene Act was too ambiguously worded that prosecuting sellers + publishers= v. hard.

29
Q

What helped the pornography industry to flourish in the sixties?

A
  • Low printing costs

- Corrupt policemen in Obscene Publications Squad of Scotland Yard

30
Q

Why was the Sexual Offences Act 1967 implemented?

A

Home Secretary Roy Jenkins gave bill parliamentary time despite conservative views on sexual morality- believed homosexuality should be decriminalised as criminalising aspects of private life was ‘uncivilised’.

31
Q

What was the Sexual Offences Act 1967?

A

Decriminalised private sexual acts between two consenting men over the age of 21. Soliciting gay sex in public was still illegal.

32
Q

What was the Abortion Act 1967?

A
  • Legalised abortions up to 28 weeks.
  • Introduced by David Steel; in debate he focused on high no. deaths + injuries that resulted from illegal backstreet abortions- 40 dead in ‘66.
33
Q

How did the public react to the Acts of 1967?

A

Wasn’t v.popular; shows despite new affluence of 60s some attitudes to private life hadn’t changed. Those interviewed by Schofield and later Gorer:

  • 85% disapproved of homosexuality
  • 50% believed it should be punished more severely.
34
Q

What was the Obscene Publications Act?

A

1959: Let ‘serious works of art’ to use ‘obscene’ words,imagery- recognised gr8r public openness to sexual imagery but only at elite lvl, only in ‘77 that law was extended to include films.

35
Q

What was the Suicide Act?

A

1961: Decriminalised suicide in England and Wales so that those who failed in suicide attempts would no longer be prosecuted.

36
Q

What was the Murder Act?

A

1965: Abolition of the death penalty. Passed as most MPS had been convinced by long campaign by politicians- most of public remained in favour of capital punishment.

37
Q

What was the Family Planning Act?

A

1961: Made the pill available on the NHS; 1 million women used it by 1967.

38
Q

What was the Theatres Act?

A

1968: Abolished censorship in the theatre, let British Board of Film Directors to allow screening of some films with sexual content before 1977.

39
Q

What was the Divorce Reform Act?

A

1969: Allowed couples to divorce after 2 year separation (or 5 if only one wanted divorce); neither had to prove fault anymore.

40
Q

Evidence for the success of the Obscene Publications Act 1967

A
  • 1974: Softcore porn film Emanuelle was first adult film shown in Brit theatres- 4th most popular film of ‘74
  • ‘The Joy of Sex’ 1972 was sexually explicit and illustrated, dealt w/sex in its own right + was a bestseller
41
Q

Evidence for more liberal attitudes towards sex before marriage

A

By 1990 >1% of first sexual intercourse occurred after marriage

42
Q

Evidence of growing tolerance towards homosexuality

A
  • 1976 Tom Robinson released single ‘Glad to be Gay’- reached no.18 on the charts
  • ’70s celebs like Larry Grayson w/catchphrases ‘What a gay day’ and ‘Seems like a nice boy’ made ‘camp behaviour more acceptable on TV
43
Q

Evidence of how attitudes towards homosexuality didn’t change after the Sexual Offences Act 1967

A
  • ‘Camp’ Tv stars like Larry Grayson publicly denied being gay- he told the Daily Mirror he just pretended to be gay.
  • Tom Robinson’s hit single voiced lot of issues faced by gay community- police brutality, demonization in the media, violence; but single was celebrated as opposite.
  • No. men arrested for ‘public indecency’ trebled 67-72
44
Q

How did Margaret Thatcher oppose the permissive society?

A
  • Became increasingly outspoken about her disdain for it and her fears for standards of public decency
  • ‘70 Finchley Press interview ‘I should like to see a reversal of the permissive society’
  • Complained in ‘77 ‘basic Christian values…are under attack’
45
Q

How did Mary Whitehouse oppose the permissive society?

A
  • Launched National Viewers’ and Listeners’ Association (NVALA) in 65; she claimed it attracted 100,000 members after its creation
  • Her Clean-Up TV petition in 1964 gained 500,000 signatures
  • Campaigned v. porn; may’ve influenced govt’s ‘81 choice to force sex shops to have black-out windows.
46
Q

The Nationwide Festival of Light

A
  • Hyde Park 1971
  • Staged to promote Christian morality
  • Rally supported by celebs like Cliff Richard
  • Event inspired over 70 other regional rallies
  • Events attracted crowds of 100,000+ ppl
47
Q

Members of ‘Beyond the Fringe’

A

Peter Cook, Dudley Moore, Johnathan Miller, Alan Bennett, et al,

48
Q

How was safe sex encouraged after WW2?

A

Condoms became thinner, pre-lubed and more accepted- CofE endorsed it in 1958- and available- could get it in Boots in 1966.

49
Q

Successes of the NVALA- Legislation

A

May have influenced legislation banning child porn (Protection of Children Act of 1978) and indecent ads (Indecent Displays Act of 1981).

50
Q

Successes of the NVALA- General

A
  • Got the movie Deep Throat banned in Britain
  • 1976 it was involved in efforts to get a Danish filmmaker who wanted to make a movie about Christ’s sex life banned from Britain.
  • Successful blasphemy trial against Gay News for what was seen as a heretical poem about Christ.