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Flappers and Factory Lads: Youth and Youth Culture in Interwar Britain
Author(s) -
Todd Selina
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
history compass
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.121
H-Index - 1
ISSN - 1478-0542
DOI - 10.1111/j.1478-0542.2006.00335.x
Subject(s) - movie theater , youth culture , politics , youth studies , poverty , gender studies , social class , sociology , political science , history , law , art history
The interwar years witnessed a transition in the experience, representation, and treatment of youth. While David Fowler identifies an interwar explosion of a commercialised youth culture, other historians suggest that young people’s lifestyles were fractured by class. More affluent young people were in full‐time education, but the majority of children entered the labour market at the age of fourteen. Young wage‐earners shouldered economic responsibility but increasingly experienced personal affluence as employment opportunities expanded. This influenced the proliferation of dance halls and cinemas and shaped political interest in young people. Gender as well as class affected lifestyles: parents allowed sons more freedom, but young women’s employment opportunities expanded significantly, enabling them to become important leisure consumers. Poverty prevented the emergence of a uniform, commercialised youth culture before the Second World War, but socially, and sometimes politically, young people expressed collective interests and concerns, albeit shaped by social class.