The Locator -- [(subject = "Censorship--History")]

69 records matched your query       


Record 15 | Previous Record | MARC Display | Next Record | Search Results
Author:
Thompson, Ben.
Title:
Ban this filth! : letters from the Mary Whitehouse archive / edited by Ben Thompson ; based on an idea by Jonny Trunk and Jo Wheeler.
Publisher:
Faber & Faber,
Copyright Date:
2012
Description:
vii, 406 pages ; 24 cm
Subject:
Whitehouse, Mary,--1910-2001--Correspondence.
Whitehouse, Mary,--1910-2001.
National Viewers' and Listeners' Association (Great Britain)
National Viewers' and Listeners' Association (Great Britain)
1900-1999
Censorship--History--20th century--Sources.
Censorship.
History.
Personal correspondence.
Sources.
Other Authors:
Thompson, Ben.
Trunk, Jonny.
Wheeler, Jo.
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: 1. Becoming Mary -- 2. Mary and the BBC -- 3. From the Town Hall Meeting to NVALA -- 4. Mary vs. Pop -- 5. Mary and Parliament -- 6. Mary and ITV -- 7. Mary vs. the Playwrights -- 8. The Poetry of Prurience -- 9. Mary at the Movies -- 10. Swann's Way -- 11. Mary vs. the Pornographers -- 12. Mary vs. the Blasphemers -- 13. Mary and the Church -- 14. Mary and `the New Gaiety' -- 15. Mary in the Eighties.
Summary:
In 1964, Mary Whitehouse launched a campaign to fight what she called the 'propaganda of disbelief, doubt and dirt' being poured into homes through the nation's radio and television sets. Whitehouse, senior mistress at a Shropshire secondary school, became the unlikely figurehead of a mass movement: the National Viewers' and Listeners' Association. For almost forty years, she kept up the fight against the programme makers, politicians, pop stars and playwrights who she felt were dragging British culture into a sewer of blasphemy and obscenity. From Dr Who ('Teatime brutality for tots') to Dennis Potter (whose mother sued her for libel and won) to the Beatles - (whose Magical Mystery Tour escaped her intervention by the skin of its psychedelic teeth) - the list of Mary Whitehouse's targets will read to some like a nostalgic roll of honour. Caricatured while she lived as a figure of middle-brow reaction, Mary Whitehouse was held in contempt by the country's intellectual elite. But were some of the dangers she warned of more real than they imagined? Ben Thompson's selection of material from her extraordinary archive shows Mary Whitehouse's legacy in a startling new light. From her exquisitely testy exchanges with successive BBC Directors General, to the anguished screeds penned by her television and radio vigilantes, these letters reveal a complex and combative individual, whose anxieties about culture and morality are often eerily relevant to the age of the internet.
ISBN:
0571281494
9780571281497
OCLC:
(OCoLC)839379049
Locations:
OVUX522 -- University of Iowa Libraries (Iowa City)

Initiate Another SILO Locator Search

This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.