ABSTRACT

Identifying 'permissive populism', the trickle down of permissiveness into mass consumption, as a key feature of the 1970s, Leon Hunt considers the values of an ostensibly 'bad' decade and analyses the implications of the 1970s for issues of taste and cultural capital. Hunt explores how the British cultural landscape of the 1970s coincided with moral panics, the troubled Heath government, the three day week and the fragmentation of British society by nationalism, class conflict, race, gender and sexuality.

chapter 1|15 pages

‘The Decade that Taste Forgot'?

Revisiting the 1970s

chapter 2|18 pages

Permissive Populism

Low cultural production in the 1970s

chapter 3|22 pages

From Carnival to Crumpet

Low comedy in the 1970s

chapter 4|18 pages

Lads and Loungers

Some 1970s masculinities

chapter 5|17 pages

‘Knuckle Crazy'

‘Youthsploitation' fiction

chapter 6|23 pages

Can You Keep it Up Fora Decade?

British sexploitation

chapter 7|28 pages

Coming Clean …

From Robin Askwith to Mary Millington

chapter 8|18 pages

Grim Flarey Tales

British horror in the 1970s

chapter |2 pages

Postscript

Academics behaving badly?