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The Beatles and Sixties Britain

£36.99

  • Date Published: March 2022
  • availability: Available
  • format: Paperback
  • isbn: 9781108708463

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About the Authors
  • Though the Beatles are nowadays considered national treasures, this book shows how and why they inspired phobia as well as mania in 1960s Britain. As symbols of modernity in the early sixties, they functioned as a stress test for British institutions and identities, at once displaying the possibilities and establishing the limits of change. Later in the decade, they developed forms of living, loving, thinking, looking, creating, worshipping and campaigning which became subjects of intense controversy. The ambivalent attitudes contemporaries displayed towards the Beatles are not captured in hackneyed ideas of the 'swinging sixties', the 'permissive society' and the all-conquering 'Fab Four'. Drawing upon a wealth of contemporary sources, The Beatles and Sixties Britain offers a new understanding of the band as existing in creative tension with postwar British society: their disruptive presence inciting a wholesale re-examination of social, political and cultural norms.

    • Provides readers with an accessible, rigorously researched study of a band and a decade that have long been subject to myths and misrepresentation
    • Shows how the Beatles acted as the sand in the oyster of sixties Britain: a disruptive presence inciting a re-examination of key institutions and core beliefs
    • Provides a new answer to the perennial question of the Beatles' relationship to the 'swinging sixties' and the 'permissive society'
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    Reviews & endorsements

    '… Collins helps readers better understand the forces that impacted Britain during the turbulent 1960s, shedding new light on the Beatles for modern audiences. This deeply researched, distinctive, and well-argued book is a much-needed addition to the field … Highly recommended.' J. F. Lyons, Choice

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    Product details

    • Date Published: March 2022
    • format: Paperback
    • isbn: 9781108708463
    • length: 383 pages
    • dimensions: 243 x 168 x 19 mm
    • weight: 0.64kg
    • contains: 10 b/w illus. 15 tables
    • availability: Available
  • Table of Contents

    Introduction
    1. The other sixties: an anti-permissive permissive society?
    2. Society, 1963–65: The Beatles and modernity
    3. Society, 1966–70: The Beatles go too far
    4. Culture: the Beatles as artists
    5. Politics: the Beatles, parliament and revolution
    Conclusion.

  • Author

    Marcus Collins, Loughborough University
    Marcus Collins is Senior Lecturer in Cultural History at Loughborough University and an elected member of Council of the Royal Historical Society. A specialist on popular culture and social change since 1945, he is author of Modern Love: An Intimate History of Men and Women in Twentieth-Century Britain (2003), editor of The Permissive Society and its Enemies: Sixties British Culture (2007) and co-author of Why Study History? (2020).

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