B. S. Johnson and Post-War Literature 2014
DOI: 10.1057/9781137349552_1
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Introduction: Avant-Garde Possibilities — B.S. Johnson and the Sixties Generation

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Cited by 12 publications
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“…37 Johnson used the "time of troubles" 38 in which Christie Malry was published as an inspiration and created a novel which "had a definite political viewpoint". 39 While some scholars see Christie Malry "as a response to two historical events of the early 1970s: the unsuccessful trades union campaign to prevent the Heath government's Industrial Relations Bill from becoming law, and the successful prosecution of the small British anarchist group known as the Angry Brigade" 40 , the others argue that it serves as a commentary on more general social phenomena such as a global raise of terrorism 41 , political murder 42 or widespread industrialization. 43 Regardless the interpretation, a plethora of social issues which Johnson decided to address with his text undoubtedly offers an illuminating insight into pressing matters of the turn of the decade and immerses the reader in an almost political reading.…”
Section: Journalistic Naturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…37 Johnson used the "time of troubles" 38 in which Christie Malry was published as an inspiration and created a novel which "had a definite political viewpoint". 39 While some scholars see Christie Malry "as a response to two historical events of the early 1970s: the unsuccessful trades union campaign to prevent the Heath government's Industrial Relations Bill from becoming law, and the successful prosecution of the small British anarchist group known as the Angry Brigade" 40 , the others argue that it serves as a commentary on more general social phenomena such as a global raise of terrorism 41 , political murder 42 or widespread industrialization. 43 Regardless the interpretation, a plethora of social issues which Johnson decided to address with his text undoubtedly offers an illuminating insight into pressing matters of the turn of the decade and immerses the reader in an almost political reading.…”
Section: Journalistic Naturementioning
confidence: 99%