Popular Culture: Past and Present.
Popular Culture: Past and Present.
Popular Culture: Past and Present.
Popular Culture:
Past and Present
A Reader Edited by
BERNARD WAITES, TONY BENNETT AND
GRAHAM MARTIN
at the Open University
,.
CONTENTS
Acknowledgements
Preface
Popular culture.
1. Culture
I. Waites, Bernard II. Bennett, Tony
III. Martin, Graham, 1927
306
HMIOI
ISBN 0-7099-1909-3
This reader is one part of an Open University Integr ted tching system
i l available to students.
and the selection is therefore related to other matera
expressed
II is designed 10 evoke the critical understanding of students. ?pinions
.
in it are not necessarily those of the course team or of the Ururslty.
Part One
Introduction
1. Popular Recreations under Attack Robert Ma/colmson
2. Class Consciousness: the Radical Culture Edward Thompson
3. Class and Leisure in Mid-Victorian England Hugh Cunningham
4. Working-class Culture and Working-class Politics in London,
1870-1900: Notes on the Remaking of a Working Class
15
20
47
66
191
194
219
242
263
284
294
308
Index
323
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
ture. The editors would therefore like to thank all members of the
T H E COURSE TEAM
Authors
Tony Bemett. Course Team
Colin Mercer
Chairman
Richard MiddJeton
Tony Aldgate
Dave Morley
Geoffrey Bourne
John Muncie
Golby, Bill Purdue, James Donald, Tony Aldgate, John Muncie and
David Cardiff
Gill Perry
Ruth Finnegan for their help both in suggesting articles for inclusion in
Alan Clark
Bill Purdue
the Reader and indicating how best they might be edited. Thanks also
Noel Coley
Carrie Roberts
James Donald
Paddy Scannell
course team for the part they played in the discussions which gave
birth to the shape of
Dave Elliott
Grahame Thompson
as much for her unfailing good humour as for her remarkable efficiency.
We are also indebted to John Taylor of the Publishing Division at the
Open University for the assistance he has rendered the course team in
Ruth Finnegan
Ken Thompson
Francis Frascina
Bernard Waites
John Colby
Paul Willis
Stuart Hall
Janet Woollacott
Graham Martin
Other Members
Jane Bailey
Course Manager
Susan Boyd-Bowman
BBC Producer
Kate Clements
Editor
Tony Coulson
Liz Lane
Vic Lockwood
Robert Nicodemus
Liaison Librarian
Editor
BBC Producer
Representative from the Institute of
Educational Technology, the Open
Lesley Passey
University
Designer
Mike Philps
BBC Producer
Sarah Shepherd
Editor
PREFACE
PART ONE
INTRODUCTION
The readings collected in the nrst section of the Reader are intended as
a guide to current debates in the historical study of popular culture.
They are not, of course, totally comprehensive. One striking absence is
the neglect of those historical studies which have sought to reconstruct
the popular culture of pre-industrial, early modem Europe.
intellectual richness of recent research into ..magic. witchc.r.aft,. and
pop1ilar menrat1hes, pursUed by historian.!UY{c Keith Thomay, Peter
Burke and C@o-Gini1:itgg, I1!..3! tfiis neglecl.very r.cgrettab)e.' How
ever, we have used the term 'popular culture' in a historically privileged
sense. For us, it is specific to societies where the market econo'llY has
penetrated most forms of cultural production and consumption. Popular culture entails a system of production, although that is not all it
n.lli
entails and pin-pointing its historical origins in Britain is not eas
recentl):, many historians would have accepted the idea of a 'Bl
ge'
for t e common peop e separating the popular pursuits of eightnth
ccntury, largely rural, society frofu tlie new pattern of working-class
leisure of urban, mid-Victorian BJitain_ Such an idea fitted the pessimistic interpretation of the social consequences of early industrialisation_
Yet Hugh Cunningham describes a thriving popular culture dating from
the 1820$, based on fairs, shows and travelling theatrical trol!pes,
supplied by thrusting cultural entrepreneurs and common to rural and
urban society (Reading 3). To his own surprise, he fmds himself
amongst the 'optimist' school of historians? Cynningham's.and-others'
work emphasises the many continuities between the plebeian culture of
the l eignteenth centifry and
....the
..
culture provided by the market for
the new working class of the nineteenth. ...
Our historically privileged use of the term does not, we hope, result
from wilful indifference to all the evidence for historical continuity.
None the less, we would argue that cultural relationships were funda
mentally transformed with the working out of capitalist industrialisa
tion during the.....econd and third quarters of the nineteenth century.
There was an inner disparity between the demotic culture of a largely
rural world and the new urban popular culture which the experience of
particular social and ethnic groups clarifies with some sharpness.
e
Lees, in her excellent study of Irish immigrants in London, writes:
-comparison of nineteenth century-ruHl1rish religion and folk bel,kfs
with-ute-popular-Gatholicism"Of-irishrnigran-iSin LOiiaon reveals two
very_ ilifferen worlOsof imaginatfOn=an<Laj;t. ion_ The rituals and
symbols of belief were transformed in the city, a process which can be
;f.1
n:..
15
16
Introduction
Introduction
illustrated by the contrast between the rural St Brigit of the Irish land
less peasantry and the urban St Briget of the immigrant working class:
the latter lost all links with agriculture and the provision of food and
changed from the patroness of cattle to a symbol of female virtue and
<:>
'1'0':
'\
chastity.
tion from a society of ranks and orders to class society . The fIrst
reading, from
Society
17
of the real traditions, value systems and ideas in which men and women
had embodied class experience as 'false'. It was one facet of that
'enonnous conde!.Cension of posterity' which assumed that the repres.
sed had no understanding of their own struggle, and it opened the way
to the elite party as the 'true' bearer of proletarian consciousness.
Thompson insisted on freeing the historical process from determinism
and teleology and restoring human agency to it. He rebuked the pre
vailing right-wing orthodoxies of economic history for their shallow
and propagandist preoccupation with economic growth and their
incomprehension of the exploitation and conflict which lay behind
aggregate accounts of economic change. 'Process', 'experience' and
'culture' were the key tenns in Thompson's conceptual framework,
which he had developed partly out of an engagement with Raymond
Williams's CulllUeandSociery (1958)and The LongRevoluto
i n (1961).
The liberalisation, during the late 19608 and 19708, of social history
from the narrow confmes of economic and 'Labour' history, clearly
18
Introduction
Introduction
field of study that we have taken George Perry's account of the inter
war film industry and Paddy Scannell's and David CardifPs essay on the
social foundations of British broadcasting (Readings
continuous present. However, the post-war period has not yet been a
10) is exceptional in
being
enquiry as nineteenth<entury.
B.A. Waites
Tony Bennett
Graham Martin
The Open University
Milton Keynes
Notes
I. K. Thomas, Religion and the Decline a/Magic (1971): P. Burkc,Popu14r
Culture in Early Modem t.urope (1978); C. Ginzburg, The Cheese lind the Worms
(1980).
2. H. Cunningham, LeilUre and the Industrial Revolution (1980), p. 9.
3. L. Lees, ExileJ a/Erin (1979), p. 185.
4. Cunningham, LeilUre, p. 192 and elsewhere.
5. G. Lukacs, History and Class CQnsciousness (1971), p. 5 I.
6. See Vil/4ge Life and Labour (1976) and Miner!, Qua"ymen and Salrworken
(1976), both edited by R. Samuel.
19
Robert Malcolmson
Robert Malcolmson
From around the middle of the eighteenth century there are many signs
of an increasing willingness among people of authority to intervene
against the customary practices of popular recreation. Recreational
customs were subjected to a multitude of direct attacks, many of
which were initiated and organized at the local level, though they were
usually related to some of the more general changes in attitudes and
circumstances [. . J. Attacks o f this kind were always intended to
achieve the outright suppression of some particular practice, and
their objectives, at least in the long run, were normally fulfilled. Efforts
to eliminate some long-standing custom - a blood sport in one place,
a fair, a wake, or a football match in another - were taking place in all
parts of the country, and some of the campaigns for reform resulted
in passionate controversy, and occasionally even physical confronta
tions.
.
20
21
In later years criticisms of this sort were voiced with greater warmth
and by the early nineteenth century the opposition to blood sports wa
vehement and intense. [ .. .J The movement against popuJar blood
sports was at its peak during the first forty years of the nineteenth cen
lury; by the 1840s most of them had been almost entirely eliminated.
Throwing at cocks was the firsl of the blood sports to be seriously
attacked and the fust to be generally suppressed. Periodic attempts may
have been made to curtail the sport during the Stuart period, but it was
not until the middle of the eighteenth century that a sustained and
widespread campaign was directed against the custom. [... J
Mercury of
IS
us
22
Robert Malcolmson
taking steps to suppress the sport in 1814, and a decade later the mayor
23
other blood sports, may have already been in decline by around 1800,
at least in certain parts of the country. 'This custom of baiting the bull,'
claimed the Sporring Magazine in 1793, 'has of late years been almost
laid aside in the north of England'; at Uncoln it was said
1789 to be
in
only the last remnants of the amusement. For most of the common
century.ll The reasons for this apparent decline are not at all clear.
dash his bones to pieces with a Club? I can compare it to nothing but
the behaviour of that silly Fellow, who boasted of his Activity, because
for baiting, as they had often done in the past; gentlemen had in almost
has no rival bird to inflame his jealousy, and call forth his powers, but,
and other missiles'. This fact of unfairness, the fact that the cock was
put in such a weak competitive position, was mentioned by many of
the critics, and it probably served to draw the attention of people with
small
was
relatively vulnerable to
all cases given up their patronage of the sport; and many pUblicans
But whatever the reasons may have been for this eighteenth-centul)'
clear that bullbaiting was still being practised in many places during the
fIrst forty years of the nineteenth century. It continued to be a popular
5th of November diversion at Uncoln, Bury St Edmunds, and at
earts of Buckingham
It was a customary
common nuisance), but the lack of any statute 011 the subject tended to
24
Robert Malcolmson
25
parish:
26
Robert Malcolmson
27
28
Robert Malcolmson
29
30
Robert Malcolmson
suggesting that
In fonner times, when the town contained but few inhabitants, the
game was not attended with its present evils, but it was no a well
ascertained fact that many of the inhabitants suffered consl?e.rble
injury, in person as well as property, from this anua1 e:oubltio ;
and he himself knew of instances where persons havmg an mterest
houses, especially the larger ones, had experienced losses fro.m want
of occupiers, at adequate rents; parties who would othefWLSe hve
expended many thousands a year on the trade o the twn, havg
left it or declined to reside in it, because they did not like to bnng
up thir families here, undr the i?ea thatgDerby was one of the
lowest and wickedest places the kingdom.
tn
ill
[,
_. oppoS!'t'IOn t0 the
Although there was a deftnite element f mOI<U
,
holiday matches (at Derby the game was vanously p ke f as brutal
that
clear
IS
It
),
, , g', 'disgraceful'' 'inhuman', 'fllthy and disgustmg
lZm
to
Ion
f
'
h
t
0Pp0s!
e
m
erne
th
prominent
moral outrage was a much less
even
perhaps
or
sports,
blood
against
attacks
the
in
was
it
football than
pleasure fairs. There were fewer objective grounds for passionate denun
ciations: while many football mes were undoubtedly rough and
unregulated, serious injuries during the major holiday matches see to
have been uncommon'' for the most. part the crowds were relatively
orderly, and the games were pursued a reasonably sportmg manner.
'During these boisterous Saturnalia,' remarked one obrver of e
Kingston game, 'the inhabitants are reduced to the neceSSIty o.fbarnca
ding their windows; and the tra.de of t?e town is soewha.t lffipeded;
yet the general good-humour W1th which the sport IS earned n pre
vents any serious complaints; and the majority of the corporation are
favourable to its continuance.'! Football was regarded by some gentle
men as a 'manly sport', rugged but character-building, and there was
some feeling that it helped to sustain the Englishman'S 'bul1og cour
age'. Several matches enjoyed a considerabe gentee.1 folloWUlg, a fea
ture which was often remarked on_ One wnter, for Ulstance, spoke of
how at Derby 'the crowd is encouraged by respectable persons attached
to each party . . . who take a surprising interest in the result f the
day's "sport", urging on the players with shouts, and even, andmg !o
those who are exhausted, oranges and other refreshment. The ClJ
cumstances at Kingston were much the same: many gentlemen were
known to be favourably disposed towards the custom. An attempt to
suppress the practice in 1840 was blcked.by the Town Council, and
at the same time a petition from the mhabltants was sent to the Com
missioners of the Metropolitan Police requesting that they not interfere
with the sport.S5 In 1860-1, when efforts were made to put down the
Ashbourne game, its supporters included some of 'the most respectable
, ,
'
ill
31
32
Robert Malcolmson
33
34
Robert Mulcolmson
35
We can see, then, that gatherings which were largely plebeian, and un
abashedly devoted to pleasure, enjoyed considerably less security than
those in which substantial economic interests were involved and with
tinle most of these popular events disappeared. However, it should 1le
emphasized that their decline was gradual and relatively gentle; by the
mid-nineteenth century it was only moderately advanced. In the long
run, in fact, this decline was probably more a consequence of the
diminishing role of the countryside in the overall life of the nation and
the rise of a predominantly urban culture, than of the organized attacks
of influential opinion. Many changes n
i
rural recreations were a result
of a whole set of larger transformations in the nature of rural society.
Thomas Hardy, for instance, pointed to the increasing mobility in the
countryside as the major reason for the disappearance of many popular
traditions: the main change, he thought,
_
36
Robert Malcolmson
fashi
37
(. . J
38
Roberl Malcolmson
'The arguments for its high gratification to those who possess leisure
and wealth, more especially in land, and for its undisputed conducive
,
ness to health and hilarity, will ever prove decisive. 8>\ There was some
distress at the general meeting of the R.s.P.C.A. in 1 840 when a person
stood up and asked 'the noblemen and gent1emen on the platform, who
declaimed upon the subject of cruelty to animals, how many hunters
had they in their stables, and how many had been ridden to death for
their amusement? (Cries of no, no.)'; but the Society'S supporters were
quick to defend themselves. 'I, for one,' admitted Lord Dudley C.
Stuart, 'keep scveral hunters, and love the pleasures of the chase as
sincerely as any man':
At the same time, my notion is, that as all animals were made for
the use of man, there can be no possible harm in making them
conducive to our rational enjoyments, as well as employing them for
our profit and convenience; but at the same time, I trust, that I
never in my life ill-used any animal to promote my pleasure or
amusement; (Hear, hear,) and I believe, generally speaking, that in
pursuing the sport of hunting, litt1e or no crulty is practised. o
doubt the stern advocate for humanity may object both to huntmg
and steepie<hasing as unnecessary, and shooting and fishing would
of course come within the same rule; but I think these objections to
our national sports may be carried too far, and, so long as unneces
sary cruelty is avoided, I see no reason to cry them down on the
score of inhumanity; and I believe it is generally admitted, that the
sports of the field, if unavoidably attended with a certain degree of
suffering on the one hand, produce, on the other hand, many
advantages wroch might fairly be brought forward as a set-off against
the alleged cruelty of such practices. (Hear, hear .)85
Popular blood sports, however, could not be discovered to offer any
such compensating features. Bull.baiting, for instance, was thought to
admit of 'no one palliation that may be urged in excuse of some "'''''tions, which though on principles of humanity, cannot be altogether
pecuJilJr atrocities of
justified; yet not being marked with any of the
,
Rationalizations for
.M
comparison
into
brought
be
the other, must not
field sports, however, were not always easily sustained. and some
writers found it useful to call upon the will of Providence:
though having no partiality or fondness for the chase in any
[we are} yet constrained to believe that there is such a provision
made for it by an all-wise Providence in the constitution of
the instinct of hounds, and even in the strategems of fleetness of
hare herself, who may often have a gratification in eluding or
39
40
involvement in crowded settings, and hence were out of tune with the
newer tastes. The home was a sanctuary and its 'flIeside comforts'
were the highest rewards. And since these satisfactions were imagined
has put within the reach of the poor no less than the rich', thought
.Robert Malcolmson
41
th
ranks above
Notes
der either the one or the other; since all such Profusion must be
repaired at the Cost of the Public.'98 It was entirely proper, then, to
1789 '
between a
of their culture; for labouring men it was (or could easily become) a
be born for no other Purpose than to consume the Fruits of the Earth',
wrote Henry Fielding, 'is the Privilege (if it may be really called a
Privilege) of very few. The greater
produce them, or Society will no longer answer the Purposes for which
it was ordained.''' Diversion (indeed, often diversion in abundance)
was an indulgence which the affluent could readily afford, but the
and Money are almost synonymous; and as they have very little of each
Sporting MDgf1Z1le,
i
vol. Itl (1793), p. 77;Stamford Mercury, 1 3 November
42
Robert Malcolmson
A Scriptural and Moral Catechism, Designed Chiefly to Lead the Mlllds of the
.
Rising GIIeratioll 10 the Love and Practice ofMercy, and to Expose Ie lIoma
.
Nature and ExceedingSinfulneu ofCrueity to the Dumb CreallOll (Bl.IffilOgham,
1833), Part II, pp. 56.
17. Parliamentary History, vol. XXXV, pp. 202-14, and vol. XXXVI,
pp. 82954.
18. Cobbett's Parliamentary Debates, vol. XIV, pp. 85\-3, 989-90, 1,029-41
and 1,071; and vol. XVI, pp. 726 and 845-6.
19. 3 George IV c. 7 1 ;ParliDmentary Debates, New $elies, vol. XIX, pp.
(6 June 1828); FA. Carrington and J. Paync, Repol'ts ofCases Argued and Ruled
at Nisi Prius (9 vats.; London, 1823-41), vol. Ill, pp. 225-8; and Voice of
Humanity, vol. I (1830-1), p. 49. Theone unequivocal statute on the subject wu
the 12 1st section of 3 Geolge TV c. 126, which made iUegaI buU-baiting on the
public highways.
20. Parliamentary DelxHes, New Series, vol. lX, pp. 433-5; vol. X, pp. 1304,
368-9 and 486-96; vol. XII, pp. 65761 and 1,00213; vol. XIV, pp. 64752; and
vol. XXI, pp. 1,319-20.
21.5 &. 6 William rv c. 59. An Act of 1849 'for the more effectual p,even
don of Cruelty to Animals', 12 & 13 Victoria c. 92, wu similar to the Act of
1835, though it was more explicit about the illegality of cock-{Ighting (the
earlic. Act had only outlawed the keeping of cockpits).
22. (Sir Richard Hill! , A Lctter to the Right flon. William Windham. Oil Iris
Late Opposition to the Bill to Prevent BullBaiting (London, 2nd cdn, n.d.), rl.Ist
published n
i 1800; Percival Stockdale, A Remonstrance Against fhruna"ity to
.
A IIimals; and Particularly Against the Sawzge Practice ofBullBaltmg (Alnw/ck,
1802): Edward Barry, BullBaiting! A Sermon on Barbarity to God's Dumb
Creation (Reading, 1802).
23. Lewis Bettany (ed.), Diaries of William Johnston Temple /7801796
(Oxford, 1929), p.187.
43
24. Sir Oswald Mosley, lliUory 01 tire Castle, Priory, and Town ofTutbury
(L.ondon 1832), p. 90; RSPCA, MS Minute Book no. 3, pp. 14 and 24-6.
25. GIbbs, Aylesbury, p. 559; George Oliver, The HiJtory alld Antiquitie, of
the Town and Minster ofBeverley. ill the Coullty of YOI'k (Beverley, 1829),
p. 422; RSPCA, MS Minute Book no. 2 , pp. 93-4 and 202-4, and Twelfth
44
Robert Malcolmson
45
II
(II
O.
v 89. Parliamentary Debates, New Series, vo!. IX, p. 4 3 3 (21 May 1823), and
oL X . p. 13]
February 1824); Macaulay, Cruelty to Animals, pp. 55-7.
(II
90. H?witt,Rural Life (1838 edn), vol. I, pp. 41-2 and 45; Stockdale,
InhII111a1lrly to Animals. p. !On.
t
;!.
cl,{
(C
Of
42.
Chriltiall Obserer, vol. V (1805), p. 13.
.
....d . ObSCfl!ClIIOnS on Some of Ihe Popular Amusementl of this
Country.
essed to the Higher Classes of Society
(London, 1827). p. 21.
Robert Isaac Wilberforce and Samuel Wilberforce, The Life
of Willam
i
lViIrl
' orce (5
voLs.; London, 1838), vol. ll, p. 449.
46
420.
96. Howitt, Rural Life (1840 OOn), p.
of the LQte Increase of
91. Beruy Fielding,An Enquiry into llie Causes
.
7
.
p
,
1151)
n,
ondo
Robbm(L
vol. II, pp. 4489.
98. Ibkl., pp. 1112; cr. Life of Wilberforce,
a d 223.
.
99. Fielding, IncreQse ofRobben, pp. 1011
ppreulon of VIce, Pan II, p. 61n.
theSu
for
Society
the
from
lS
Addre
100.
.
y (2 vols.; London, 1191),
101. Vicesimus Knox, Essays Moral Qnd Literar
vol. II, pp. 1534.
(Penguin ,
When contrasted with the Radical years which preceded and the
Chartist years which succeeded it, the decade of the
18205
seems
is going on for all that. It's when all's quiet that the seed'sagrowing,
Republicans and Socialists are pressing their doctrines.
These quiet years were the years of ruchard Carlile's contest for the
liberty of the press; of growing Irade union strength and the repeal of
the Combination
Acts;
in which individuals
and groups sought to render into theory the twin experiences which we
end of the decade, when there came the climactic contest between Old
Corruption and Reform, it
the self-taught was above all a political consciousness. For the Hrst half
of the nineteenth century, when the formal education of a great part of
the people entailed little more than instruction in the Three R's, was
by no means a period of intellectual atrophy. The towns, and even the
villages, hummed with the energy of the autodidact. Given the elemen
tary techniques of literacy, labourers, artisans, shopkeepers and clerks
groups. And the books or instructors were very often those sanctioned
47
48
Edward nlOmpson
49
delayed. But the ability to read was only the elementary technique. The
ability to handle abstract and consecutive argument was by no means
inborn; it had to be discovered against ahnost overwhelming difficulties
the lack of leisure, the cost of candles (or of spectacles), as well as
educational deprivation. Ideas and terms were sometimes employed in
the early Radical movement which, it is evident, had for some ardent
followers a fetishistic rather than rational value. Some of the Pentridge
rebels thought that a 'Provisional Government' would ensure a more
plentiful supply of 'provisions'; while, in one account of the pitmen of
the north-east in 1819, 'Universal Suffrage is understood by many of
them to mean universal suffering . . . "if one member suffers, all must
_
suffer".'2
Such evidence as survives as to the literary accompUslunent of
working men in the first two decades of the century serves only to
illustrate the folly of generalization. In the Luddite times (when few
but working men would have supported their actions) anonymous
rnessages vary from self-conscious apostrophes to 'Uberty with her
Smiling Attributes' to scarcely decipherable chalking on walls. We may
take examples of both kinds. In 1 8 1 2 the Salford Coroner, who had
returned a verdict of 'Justiftable Homicide' upon the body of a man
shot while attacking Burton's mill was warned:
. . . know thou cursed insinuater, if Burton's infamous action was
Beware,
'justifiable', the Laws of Tyrants are Reasons Dictates.
Beware! A month's bathing in the Stygian Lake would not wash
this sanguinary deed from our minds, it but augments the heritable
cause, that stirs us up in indignation.
_
Others of the promised benefits of 'general nody' were: 'We Will Nock
50
doon the Prisions and the Judge we Will murde whan he is aslepe.
The difference (the critics will teD us) is not only a matter of style:
it is also one of sensibility. The fIrst we might suppose to be written
by a bespectacled, greying, artisan - a cobbler (or hatter or instrument
maker) with Voltaire, Volney and Paine on his shelf, and a taste for the
great tragedians. Among the State prisoners of 1817 there were other
men of this order from Lancashire: the seventy-year-old William Ogden,
a letter-press printer, who wrote to his wife from prison: 'though I am
in irons, I will face my enemies like the Great Caractacus when in the
same situation'; Joseph Mitchell, another printing worker, whose
daughters were called Mirtilla, Carolina and Cordelia, and who - when
another daughter was bom while he was in prison - wrote in haste to
his wife proposing that the baby be called Portia; or Samuel Bamford
himself, whose instructions to his wife were more specific: 'a Reform
ers Wife ought to be an heroine'. The second letter (we can be almost
sure) is the work ofa collier or a village stocldnger. [ . . .J
'If the Bible Societies, and the Sunday School societies have been
attended by no other good,' Sherwin noted, 'they have at least pro
duced one beneficial effect; - they have been the means of teaching
many thousands of children to read.'3 The letters of Brandreth and his
wife; of Cato Street conspirators, and of other State prisoners, give us
some insight into that great area between the attainments of the skilled
artisan and those of the barely literate. Somewhere in the middle we
may place Mrs Johnston, addressing her husband ('My Dear Johnston'),
who was a journeyman tailor, in prison:
. . . believe me my Dear if there is not a day nor a hour in the day
but what my mind is less or more engage about you. I can appeal to
the almighty that it is true and when I retire to rest I pray God to
forgive all my enimies and change lhare heart . .
Beside this we may set the letter of the Sheffield joiner, Wolstenholme,
to his wife:
Our Minaster hath lent me four vollams of the Missionary Register
witch give me grat satisfaction to se ou the Lord is carin on is work
of grais in distant contres.
The writing of this letter was attended with difficulties, since 'Have
broke my spettacles'. Such letters were written in unaccustomed
leisure. We can almost see Wolstenholme laboriously spelling out his
words, and stopping to consult a more welllettered' prisoner when he
came to the hurdle of 'satisfaction'. Mrs Johnston may have consulted
(but probably did not) one of the 'professional' letter-writers to be
J:,-dwurd Thompson
51
found in most towns and villages, who WIote the appropriate fonn of
letter at Id. a time. For, even among the literate, letterwriting was an
unusual pursuit. The cost of postage alone prohibited it except at infre
quent intervals. For a letter to pass between the north and London
might cost Is. l(xJ., and we know that both Mrs Johnston and Mrs
Wolstenholme were suffering privations in the absence of their hus
bands - Mrs Johnston's shoes were full of water and she had been able
to buy no more since her husband was taken up.
All the Cato Street prisoners, it seems, could write after some
fashion. Brunt, the shoemaker, salted some sardonic verses with
French, while James Wilson wrote:
the Cause wich nerved a Brutus arm
to strike a Tirant with alarm
the cause for wich brave Hamden died
for wich the Galant Tell defied
a Tirants insolence and pride.
Richard
idd, another shoemaker, on the other hand, could only
muster: 'Sa I Ham a very Bad Hand at Righting'. We cannot, of course,
lake such men as a 'sample', since their involvement in political activity
indicates that they belonged to the more conscious minority who
foUowed the Radica1 press. But they may serve to warn us against
understating the diffusion of effective literacy_ The artisans are a special
case - the intellectual eiile of the class. But there were, scattered
throughout all parts of England, an abundance of educational institu
tions for working people, even if 'institution' is too formal a word for
the dame school, the penny-a-week evening school run by a factory
cripple or injured pitman, or the Sunday school itself. In the Pennine
valleys, where the weavers' children were too poor to pay for slates or
paper, they were taught their letters by drawing them with their flllgers
m a sand-table. If thousands lost these elementary attainments when
they reached adult life, on the other hand the work of the Noncon
fonnist Churches, of friendly societies and trade unions, and the needs
of industry itself, all demanded that such learning be consolidated and
advanced. 'I have found,' Alexander Galloway, the master-engineer,
reported in 1 824,
from the mode of managing my business, by drawings and written
deSCriptions, a man is not of much use to me unless he can read and
write ; if a man applies for work, and says he cannot read and write
he is asked no more questions . . .
'
In most artisan trades the journeyman and petty masters found some
52
Edward 111Ompson
53
'211. Register at its meridian, between October 1816 and February 1817,
,
54
public, which organized itself in the face of the Six Acts and the taxes
on knowledge. ( . . .J
There is perhaps no country in the world in which the contest for
the rights of the press was so sharp, so emphatically victorious, and so
peculiarly identified with the cause of the artisans and labourers. If
Peterloo established (by a paradox of feeling) the right of public
demonstration, the rights of a 'free press' were won in a campaign
extending over fifteen or more years which has no comparison for its
pig-headed, bloody-minded, and indomitable audacity. Carlile (a tin
smith who had nevertheless received a year or two of grammar school
education at Ashburton in Devon) rightly saw that the repression of
1819 made the rights of the press the fulcrum of the Radical move
ment. But, unlike Cobbett and Wooler, who modified their tone to
meet the Six Acts in the hope of living to fight another day (and who
lost circulation accordingly), Carlile hoisted the black ensign of unquali
fled defiance and, like a pirate cockboat, sailed straight into the middle
of the combined fleets of the State and Church. As, in the aftermath
of Peterloo, he came up for trial (for publishing the Works of Paine),
the entire Radical press saluted his courage, but gave him up for lost.
When he flnally emerged, after years of imprisonment, the combined
fleets were scattered beyond the horizon in disarray. He had exhausted
the ammunition of the Government, and turned its ex officio informa
tions and special juries into laughingstocks. He had plainly sunk the
private prosecuting societies, the Constitutional Association (or 'Bridge.
Street Gang') and the Vice Society, which were supported by the
patronage and the subscriptions of the nobility, bishops and Wilber
force.
Carlile did not, of course, achieve this triumph on his own. The fust
round of the battle was fought in 1817, when there were twenty-six
prosecutions for seditious and blasphemous libel and sixteen ex officio
informations ftled by the law officers of the Crown. The laurels of
victory, in this year, went to Wooler and Hone, and to the London
juries which refused to convict. Wooler conducted his own defence; he
was a capable speaker, with some experience of the courts, and defen
ded himself with ability in the grandiloquent libertarian manner. The
result of his two trials (5 June 1817) was one verdict of 'Not Guilty'
and one muddled verdict of 'Guilty' (from which three jurymen demur
red) which was later upset in the Court of King's Bench. TIle three trials
of William Hone in December 1 8 1 7 are some of the most hilarious legal
proceedings on record. 1lone, a poor bookseller and former member of
the L.C.s., was indicted for publishing blasphemous libels, in the form
of parodies upon the Catechism, Utany, and Creed. Hone, in fact, was
only a particularly witty exponent of a form of political squib long
established among the news vendors and palterers, and practised in more
Edward Thompson
55
/
56
I
while
hand, Carlile (who had taken over Sherwin's business) was more than
pleased that the injunction was refused - for the sales of the poem
were a staple source of profit in
Tyler
Southey."
The incidents of the pirating of Queen Mab and the
ment were
Vision ofJudge
57
Edward Thompson
in
more odious
totalilarian'
books read by the defendants in court - for which the accused were
Black
much subdued in the early Twenties. He did not like Carlile's Republic
anism and Deism, nor their hold on the artisans of the great centres;
and he turned increasingly back to the countryside and distanced him
self from the working-class movement. (In 1821 he undertook the first
of his Rural Rides, in which his genius seems at last to have found its
inevitable form and matter.) But, even at this distance, the Polirical
Register was always there, with its columns - like those of the Repub
lican - open to expose any case of persecution, from 80dmin to
BelWick.
The honours of
Ma"iage
a
While CarlUe fought on from prison, the satirists raked his prosecutors
ignorance
of Eighteen Centuries,
in
with fue.
The second point is the real toughness of the libertarian and consti
By Fox's Ubel Act of 1 792 the jury were judges of the libel as well as
of the fact of publishing; and however judges might seek to set this
pressed defiance to its furthest point. The main battle was over by
1823, although there were renewed prosecutions in the late Twenties
times.
Tom
enclaves of 'old Jacks' in the cities, had been banned ever since Paine's
trial
in absentia
dUring the Wars. To this he added many further offences as the struggle
Wore on, and as he himself moved from Deism to Atheism, and as he
in provocations - such as the advocacy of assassination - which
rew
llnPrisonment did not improve him. His strength lay in two things.
58
First, he would not even admit of the possibility of defeat. And second,
he had at his back the culture of the artisans.
No matter how much law they had on their side, they must always
the Six Acts, with the power to banish the authoB of sedition for
offences far less than those which Carlile both committed and proudly
after the first encounters that if Carlile were to be silenced, half a dozen
new Carliles would step into his place. The first two who did so were, in
fact. Carliles : his wife and his sister. Thereafter the 'shopmen' came for
ward. By one count, before the battle had ended Carlile had received
CarWe pledges himself to . . . give such men the best support in his
power - should any great number be imprisoned, he is not so situa
From that time forward the 'Temple of Reason' off Fleet Street was
59
Edward Thompson
pitmen. The people most prominent in the fight included clerks. shop
assistants, a fanner's son; Benbow, the shoemaker turned bookseUer;
salier (also of Leeds). The inteUectual tradition was in part derived fro
Ie Jacobin years, the circle which had once moved around Godwlll
d Mary Wollstonecraft, or the members of the L.C.S the last authen
spokesman of which - John Gale Jones -. ,,:,as one .of Carlile's. most
onstant supporters. In part it was a new tradluon, OWlllg something to
entham's growing influence and something to the 'freethinking
.
dents, or civil servants who read Byron and SheUey and the Exa :ziner,
r
and among whom, not Whig or Tory, but 'right and wrong cons
Idered
,
by each man abstractedly, is the fashion .9
s
i genera!ly supposed) characterizes the latter. It would seem to be
closer to the truth that the impulse of rational enlightenment which (in
the years of the wars) had been largely confined to the Radical inteUi
gentsia was now seized upon by the artisans and some of the skilled
Carlile's campaign drew heavily upon London; and, next, upon Man
ment, 'I read with deep interest and much profit Gibbon's Decline and
i-all of the Romon Empire, Hume's History of England, and
Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History:D The artisans, who fonned the
nuclei of Carile's
l
supporting 'Zetetic Societies' (as well as of the later
power
answered their protests with homilies and tracts. The works of the
Enlightenment came to them with the force of revelation.
In this way a reading public which was increasingly working class in
character was forced to organize itself. The war and immediate postwar
years had seen a 'kept' press, on the one hand, and a Radical press on
the other. In the Twenties much of the middle-class press freed itself
from direct Government influence, and made some use of the advant
ages which Cobbett and Carlile had gained. n,e Times and Lord
Brougham, who disliked the 'pauper press' perhaps as much as Lord
60
Edward Thompson
61
1836 the struggle was substantially over, and the way had been opened
for the Chartist press.
But the 'great unstamped' was emphatically a working-class press.
The poor Man's GU/Udian and the Working Mans Friend were in effect,
organs of the National Union of the Working Oasses; Doherty'S Poor
Man Advocate was an organ of the Factory Movement; Joshua
Hobson was a former hand-loom weaver, who had built a wooden hand
press by his own labour; Bronterre O'Brien's Desnllctive consciously
sought to develop working-class Radical theory. These small, closely
printed, weeklies carried news of the great struggle for Genera] Union
ism in these years, the lock-outs of 1 834 and the protests at the Tol
puddle case, or searching dcbate and exposition of Socialist and trade
union theory. An examination of this period would take us beyond the
limits of this study, to a time when the working class was no longer in
the making but (in its Chartist fonn) already made. The point we must
note is the degree to which the fight for press Uberties was a central
formativc influence upon the shaping movement. Perhaps 500 people
,
were prosecuted for the production and sale of the 'unstamped .n
From 1816 (indeed, from 1792) until 1836 the contest involved, not
only the editors, booksellers, and printers, but also many hundreds of
newsvendors, hawkers, and voluntary agents. [. . .}
A whole pattern of distribution, with its own folklore, grew up
around the militant press. Hawken (Mayhew was told), in order to
avoid 'selling' the Republican, sold straws instead, and then gave the
paper to their customers. In the Spen Valley, in the days of the 'un
stamped', a penny was dropped through a grating and the paper would
'appear'. In other parts, men would slip down alleys or across fields at
night to the known rendezvous. More than once the \lnstamped' were
transported under the noses of the authorities in a coffm and with a
godJy cortege of free-thinkers.
We may take two examples of the mopmen and vendors. The flT'St,
a shopwoman, serves to remind us that, in these rationalist and Owenite
circies, the claim for women's rights (almost silent since the I 790s) was
once again being made, and was slowly extending from the intelligentsia
to the a;tisans. Carlile's womenfolk, who underwent trial and imprison
ment, did so more out of loyalty than out of conviction. Very diffcrcnt
was Mrs Wright, a Nottingham lace-mender, who was one of Carlile's
VOlunteers and who was prosecuted for selling one of his Addresses
containing opinions in his characteristic manner:
A
62
Edward Thompson
,
She conducted her long defence herself13 and was rarely in",,," ,,te,d.
Towards the end of her defence,
Mrs Wright requested pennission to retire and suckle her
child that was crying. TItis was granted, and she was absent from
Court twenty minutes. In passing to and fro, to the Castle
House, she was applauded and loudly cheered by assembled
sands. all encouraging her to be of good cheer and to persevere.
week, with some help from Carlile and Cobbett. Cobbett, indeed,
interested himself particularly in the case of Swann, and when Castle
reagh committed suicide it was to Swann that Cobbett addressed his
triumphant obituary obloquies: 'Co.stlereagh has cut his own throat alld
is dead! Let that sound reach you in the depth of your dungeon . . . and
carry consolation to your suffering soul.' After serving his four and a
half years, Swann 'passed the gate of Chester Castle . . . in mind as
stubborn as ever', and resumed his trade as a hatter. But he had not yet
Some time later she was thrown into Newgate, on a November night,
with her sixmonths' baby and nothing to lie on but a mat. Such
women as Mrs Wright (and Mrs Mann of Leeds) had to meet not only
the customary prosecutions, but also the abuse and insinuations of an
outraged loyalist press. 'TItis wretched and shameless woman,' wrote
"
'
the New Times, was attended by 'several females. Are not th
e
se
:
,:;
: :
stances enough to shock every reflecting mind?' She was an .
creature' (the conventional epithet for prostitutes) 'who has cast
the distinctive shame and fear and decency of her sex'. By her
see;;:
S
example' she had depraved the minds of other mothers: 'the,;
:
in female fonn stand forward. with hardened visages, in the
to give their public countenance and support -for the first time ill
history of the Christian world - to gross, vulgar, horrid bl,,,,,hem)(
:
She was a woman, wrote Carlile, 'of very delicate health, and truly
spirit and no matter'.
The longest sentences endured by a newsvendor were probably
served by Joseph Swann, a hatmaker of Macclesfield. He was '"'''ted
in 1819 for selling pamphlets and a seditious poem:
63
'd
n
i his defence:
time; neither can I obtain work; my family are all starving . . . And
for another reason, the weightiest of all; I sell them for the good of
my fellow countrymen; to let them see how they are misrepresented
in Parliament . . . I wish to let the people know how they are hum
bugged . . .
Bench. - Hold your tongue a moment.
Defendant. - I shall not! for I wish every man to read these publi
cations . . .
Bench. - You are very insolent, therefore you are committed to
three months' imprisonment in Knutsford House of Correction, to
hard labour.
Defendant. - I've nothing to thank you for; and whenever I come
out, I'll hawk them again. And mind you [looking at Captain ClarkI
the first that I hawk shall be to your house . . .
64
Edward Thompson
tradition peculiarly their own, adding to the claim for free speech and
thought their own claim for the untrammelled propagation, in the
cheapest possible form, of the products of this thought.
All the
enlighteners and improvers of the time thought that the only limit
65
by the inadequacy of the means. The analogies which were drawn were
Notes
tors, was called (by Bell) the 'steam engille of the moral world'.
destined to work the great necessary moral and political changes among
mankind':
now could read. The inlportance of the propaganda can be seen in the
manufacturing areas into the small boroughs and market towns. One of
the Six Acts of
1819
market towns and even in the larger rural villages, and in nearly every
case it is based on the local artisans. In such centres as Croydon,
5. An old palterer told Mayhew (I, p. 252) that despite the acquittals, it
remained difficult to 'work' Hone's parodies in the !treets: 'there was plenty of
officers and constables ready to puU the feUows up,and . . . a beak that wanted
to please the high dons, would rmd some way of stopping them . . .'
6. The Complete Works of William Haz/itt, ed. P.P. Howe after the edition of
A.R. Waller and A. Glover OM. Dent and Sons Ltd, Lortdon and Toronto, 21
vots., 1930-4), vol. YU, pp. 176 fr. 'Instead of applying for an injunction against
Wat Tyler,'Haz.litt opined, 'Mr Southey would do weU to apply for an unction
against Mr Coleridge, who has undertaken his defence in The Courier.'
7. Sherin's Republican, 29 March 1817; Carlile's Republican, 30 May 1823.
8.ln thex three years there were l i S plasecutions artd 45 ex officio informa
tions.
9. Keats to his brother George, 17 September 1819, Work.r (1901), V, p. 108.
The leller continues: 'This makes the business of Carlile the bookseUer of great
moment in my mind. He hu been selling deistical pamphJets, republished Tom
Paine, and many other works held in superstitious horror . . . After all, they are
afraid to prosecute. They are raid of his defence; it would be published n
i all
the papers all over the empire. They shudder at this. The trials would t
I
a flame
they could not extinguish. Do you not think this of great import?'
10. W.J. Linton, lames Watson (Manchester, 1880), p. 19.
II. In 1830 these taxes amounted to a 4d. stamp on each newspaper or weekly
periodical, a duty of 3s. 6d. on each advertisement, a small paper duty, and a
large surety against action for libel.
12. Abel Heywood, the Manchester bookseller, elaimed the rlgure to be 150.
13. MO$t of Carlile's shopmen were provided with lon8 written defences by
Carlile, and this was pIObably so in her case.
14. The counties of Lancaster, Chester, the West Riding. Warwick, Stafford,
Derby, Leicester, Nottingham. Cumberland, Westmorland, Northumberland,
DUrham the city ofCovenlry, and the country boroughs of Newcastle-upon-Tyne
and Nottingham.
,
Hugh Cunningham
I . .)
Historians with an apparently insatiable compulsion to compartmnta1ise have seen [the] different ronns of entertainment [that flounshed
during the 1820s and 18305] in isolation one from the other - .mere
arc histories of sport, of drama, of the pantomime, and of the CirCus.
Yet what is most striking is the connections between these different
ronns of entertainment, connections so strong that one can speak of
this world of entertainment as part of one close-knit popular culture.
All these forms of entertainment were fraohly commercial in nature,
all aimed to attract spectators, all employed professionals . And beyond
this there were personal and institutional connections: people lik illy
Purvis, familiar with different fOmls of entertainment, and buildings
which could play host to pantomime or circus, sport or drama. It was
no accident that wrestling could be seen at the Eagle Tavern, soon to
become the Grecian SaJoon. and not simply coincidence that Pierce
Egan was at home in both the theatre and the prize-ring, nor that so
many of these fOmls of entertainment could be witnessed at the horse.
race or fair. One man could straddle this whole world: for example.
David Prince Miller was at various times publicist for Richardson.
impersonator of a black giantess, prizefighting sparrer, conjuror, eques
trian, fortune-teller, employee of Wombwell, magician, manager of the
Royal Adelphi Theatre, Glasgow, lessee of the Queen's Theatre, Man.
chester, and interviewer for Henry Mayhew.l
The different components of this culture were further drawn to
gether by the political necessity of defending it. On th receiving end of
a barrage of hostile conunent and legal manoeuvnngs, the culture
retaliated in its own way: by puncturing the pretensions of politicians,
and portraying them as showmen;l by fighting for a freer stage and an
end to theatrical monopoly;3 and, as we shall see, by elaborating at
every opportunity on the claim that their culture promoted patriotism
and class hannony and prevented effeminacy. On occasions there could
be embarrassing conflicts within the culture, as when, to Pierce Egan's
horror, prizefighters allowed themselves to be brought in to try to con
trol the Old Price riots at Covent Garden.4 But more generally there
66
67
68
69
Hugh Cunningham
with paternalism and 'Old Corruption'. too little sense of the dignity of
the people. In proposing their programmes of political and religious
the people. [. .
the moment onc can nod in assent when Louis James comments that
in positions of power and authority who, since early modem times, had
its petty capitalist base it reached up and down the social scale, and
class culture', but at the same time it was imbued with a sense of
popular rights. Its politics were the politics of instant reaction to
threats to what it perceived as its customary and letirnate independ
ence.
class'. These two cultures opposed the popular culture not because they
was experienced much more directly and constantly than in the past;
from within the people they were making a claim for the leadership of
.1
Charles Kingsley's hopes that leisure might serve the social func on of
bringing the classes together seemed to receive some confirmatIOn as
the Great Exhibition of 1851 ushered in a period of relative social
harmony. Historians have affirmed the same theory, arguing that there
was an alliance of the respectable within all classes against the joining
all the greater because the sponsors were now willing and anxious to
include physical recreation amongst the respectable leisure activities.
was minimal or non-existent. Class and not the divisions within classes
continued to be of prime importance for an understanding of leisure.
brought together in leisure had two distinct roots. On the one hand
were those who had opposed the attack on popular leisure in the later
SOcial conscience and radical disposition. On the other hand there was
rational recreation which was a first if hardly explicit admission on the
The remedy they proposed of course was quite different. They advo
Cated not the preservation of the past but the creation of new institu
tions and activities. Within these, they argued , the respectable of all
classes could meet in harmony. Thus it was a commonplace in the
70
Hugh Cunningham
1840, once
Royal Music Saloon and the Royal Casino, Dock Hotel.12 On the other
about. The hostility to physical recreation, the notion that there was a
split between mind and reason On the one hand and body and animality
[ . . .J
were its organisers and inspirers. Many popular sports, such as pugilism
and cock-fighting, involved not only drinking and gambling, but also
71
tive would note that money is passing hands, and that for lack of
gentry patronage, it was the publicans who organised the game. In less
idealised fonn, and at much the same period, cricket at Pudsey was
unknown
except as played mostly .in the lanes or small openings in the village
wall cape, or some large stone, set on end for a stump (called a
the middle class found this a totally alien world . In Dickens's journal,
and sometimes sewed on tlle top with twine or band. They were all
literature, and its Own meeting-places. Even the more liberal sections of
Household !Yaros,
1852,
Life, a
bone of our bone, and Oesh of our flesh - they are crackling cinders at
1852 did not reject all sport: he was hopeful for the
future, and had glimpses of a world in which sport might be the pride
m.iddle class, it is suggested, and sport can render real service to the
with a tub leg for a bat, made smaller at one end for a handle, a
'hob'), and a pot taw or some hard substance covered with listing
one-ball overs
It was from these suspect origins, much more than from the gentry
sponsored games of the SQuth, that cricket emerged as a popular
spectator sport in the fint half of the century. In
17,000
class men, women and children watched the Nottingham versus Sussex
match. These and other less notable games were reported in that jour
nal of the Fancy , Bell's Life n
i London, and there was only pardonable
Years, I can recollect when the Game of Cricket was not so popular
as it is at the prescnt Moment; but the Moment the Cricketers found
themselves the Object of Attention almost every Village had its
Cricket Green . The Record of their Prowess in Print created a Desire
72
Hugh Cunningham
73
74
.
.
rnment. Between 1845
tune allowmg boys soe measure of self.gove ed their football
"'hools committ
the seven ma.tf\ pubtic ;)'-'
and 1862
' d sports. At
.
e advocates 0r organISe
becam
,.....
......
d
mas
H
ea
f
onn.
en
to wott
ts Ul
to
paren
. 1853
letter
lar
cIrCu
a
sent
n
.
Marlborough G.E.L' Cotto
0r cneket and footb-"
games
<UJ as
'
manly
and
y
'health
the
extolling
against
oilier amusements, often of a questionable character in themselves,
or at least liable to considerable abuse, and which have no effect in
providing constant and wholesome recreation for the boys.
do
not spend their halfholidays in the playground, but in
about the country, some in bird's nesting, or in damaging property
of the neighbours, or other undesirable occupations.
The element of social control in the fostering of organised games could
hardly be more openly stated. In the following year Tllring became
Headmaster at Uppingham, and not only preached the gospel of organ
ised games but also participated in them. In the 1850s and 18608
Cliflon, Haileybury, Wellington and King Edward VI, Binningham, all
had headmasters who had been pupils or masters under Arnold, and all
adopted the Rugby game. Official support for games-playing came with
the 1864 Clarendon Commission on the older public schools which con
cluded that 'the importance which boys themselves attach to games is
somewhat greater, perhaps, tllan might reasonably be desired; but
Witllin moderate limits it is highly useful'.w
'Useful': that is certainly one reason why games-playing spread n
i
the mid-century period, for it became an essential part of the organisa
tion and structure of the public schools. But it was not simply utility
which encouraged the growth, nor was that growth confined to the
public schools. There were other reasons, which take us back to the
process of appropriation, and which may best be appreciated by
looking at Thomas Hughes's Tom Brown s School-Days, first published
in 1857, and selling 1 1 ,000 copies within a year. In its celebration of
public schools and games, the book is at the same time a criticism of
industrial, commercial and urban life. As Hughes put it, The ideas and
habits which those who have most profited by them bring away from
our public schools do not fit them to become successful traders.'
Rather it was the Iifestyle of the gentry which was held up for admira
tion, a life-style which could reconcile the middle class's urge for social
acceptance and its wish not simply to ape the aristocracy_ In the public
school boys could acquire the new-model gentry values; unintellectual,
combative, manly, Christian and patriotic. As Tom says to Arthur: 1
want to be Al al cricket and football and all the other games, and to
make my hands keep my head against any fellow, lout or gentleman. I
Hugh Cunningham
75
want to get into the sixth before I leave, and to please the Doctor; and
I want to carry away just as much Latin and Greek as will take me
through Oxford respectably.' These values, it is suggested, not only
noW, but throughout English history have been al the heart of he
nation's achievemet. 'Talbots and 5tanleys, 5t Maurs d suchlike
.
folk have led mmes and made laws time out of mmd, but those
lobie families would be somewhat astounded - if the account ever
ame to be fairly taken - to find how small their work for England has
been by the side of that of the Browns.' For Hughes, it seems, the pro
cess of appropriation must be facilitated by the rewriting of history so
that the star roles are played by the Browns; and it was easy for the
mid-nineteenth.century middle class to identify with the new-model
gentry values of the Browns.
The appeal of Tom Brown's School-Days was enhanced by the fact
that it was written in the aftennath of the aristocratic mismanagement
of the Crimean War, a war which also had the effect of bringing English
men face to face with the role of force and of fighting in industrial and
urban communities. The war created the myth of the Christian hero,
and Tom Brown was that same hero in fiction. Both were living proof
that 'old English' virtues could survive in an industrial and urban civil
isation, and that their social location now lay within the gentry, not the
aristocracy. War, and its nearest approximation, sport, also served as a
bulwark against two other insidious and connected threats: tractarian
ism and effeminacy. Puseyism, as David Newsome has commented, was
the greatest stimulus to muscular Christianity. Gamesplaying was
English, Protestant and masculine. 'Fighting with fists', wrote Hughes,
'is the natural and English way for English boys to settle their quar
rc!s.'::U How often had Pierce Egan and others said the same in the hey
day of prize.fighting? Now the argument, and the sport, were being
taken away from the Fancy and appropriated for the benefit of the
public schools and the respectable middle class.
The implications of the book and of its popularity seem inescapable.
Sport, said Veblen at the end of the century, was an atavistic survival
of the old barbarian virtue of prowess. 'The ground of an addiction to
Sports', he wrote, 'is an archaic spiritual constitution - the possession
of the predatory emulative propensity in a relatively high potency:12
And however modernised the sports beeame - defined space and time,
set rules and so on - they retained something of the characteristic
noted by Veblen. In its attempt to appropriate sport the middle class
was seeking an escape from its own world, and an escape not into the
future but into the past; the model which it held up before itself was
Ula! of the gentry - of what one might call a purposeful leisure class.
In view of this it is hardly surprising that with the sports that they
appropriated Ule middle class should also take over the ideological
76
:;:::;::
Hllg/J Omningham
{rom the Banbury Guardilln in
the peer, the overtoiled man of business and the industrious arti
san , 011 every imaginable scale from a single flower pot to the
and
to
the
language
princely
na
The fmt sign that this language and its implications were m'''ti
ranks of their more obvious
cates may be seen in the 1844 House of Lords Select Committee
down
ahead a quarter of
century, moreover, and we will find the same arguments, this time
defence of Derby Day, being put by a very different figure, "'" lOU.
ist Blanchard Jerrold:
All classes
..
bright
In
conservatory.14
its
match between Lord Monson's Burton Park Club and the Gentlemen's
Servants Club:
of those
1866:
The task was obvious: the upper class must once again take
interest in the pastimes of the lower class. What could not be p"di''',d
77
(, . .(
The tone and language of these comments are significant. It was not
simply that mjdVictorians were hoping that the classes could meet in
leisure; it was that they were doing so in the language of 'peer' and
peas.ant' . In an urban and industrial society, and one in many ways
.
dommated by mIddle-class values, the advocates of class conciliati
on in
eisure use a language which bean no relation to social reality; England
10
78
79
Hllgh Cwmingham
g
wor
students of the n on
leisure than in work. The
wlth
back
gang
'bnn
,
.
ions
edit
exp
y
CoUege " he said' wenl on man
ories and new Ideas. and
't '
lth, a store of new mem
"'
WI h lIlVlgoraI,d h,
.
couId never have
ch
wh
s
to other classe
i
'-ilalion
"
, 2S I
power 0f ass..
' COUId not
f It
"
n!ik
rkshop
w
the
of
walls
four
ventional history of the game the public schools and Oxbridge are the
dominant force from the moment the public schools begin to write
1863
ism in
1885.
of professional
paralleling that in cricket. And during that period the middle class are
seen as missionaries, using football as, amongst other thin, a forum
for class conciliation, and founding many of the clubs tltat dominate
the professional leagues today. Aston Villa, Bolton Wanderers,
nOI fulfilled.
Closely related to it was a further reason, the fact tt.at when
classes did meet in leisure they often interpreted the ,..Icaning of
,
meeting in different ways. The middle class hoped that the w,,,kj,,
class in leisure wouJd accept and ass.imilate middle<lass norms
16
groUp'.
T lte history of football follows muclt tlte same pattem. In the con
in
were financed by their employers, Peel Hall Mill, and tlte committee of
the first Sheffield Football Club included the later chairman of the
Sheffield Forge Company and the future lteadofVickers Engineering?7
matches ranging over huge spaces and involving wltole populations had
for the most part been abolished during the first half of the century.
But it seems highly likely that the more casual practice of kicking a ball
spend time converting the working<lass natives; the latter were already
entllUsiastic lovers of the game .
This brings us to our second criticism of the conventional history.
80
suppose. Geographically
the
1860s and
flowering of the southern public school tradition, but also the laying of
the foundations or the game in Sheffield, Nottingham, Binningham, the
to the greater availability and regularity of time for leisure amongst the
working class than they did to the impact on the game of the ublic
p
schools.19 We may conclude indeed that middle-<:iass claims fo?'t
heir
own impact on the game have had more influence on the historiography
of football than they have had on its practice.
The suggestion we are making here is that the working class, for lack
of any alternative, was prepared to accept for as long as necessary. the
fact of middJe.-<:lass sponsorship, but not its ideology. The demand for
recreation was great. and n
i this mid-Victorian period the commercial
out any such objective. They wanted simply to enjoy what was being
offered, and as soon as financial constraints allowed they shook off
what they perceived as heavyhanded patronage. WiUtin the Working
Men's Clubs and in football this had been achieved by the m.id-1880
s.
[ .1
.
[,
81
Hugh CWlllingham
solution to it lay in the home, and in the home, in the nature of the
sc' there could be no class-mixing. Although there was some unease
a[ on the Saturday half.holiday the men might be free to enjoy them
selves while the women scrubbed and cleaned, the answer was not that
proper task of
,len should help, but that wives should not work. The
.
. 1ar unportance
among
women was that of home-making, one 0f partlcu
the working class . 'In no rank of society', wrote Thomas Wright, 'have
home influences so great a power for good or evil, as among the
working classes.' In any minutes spared from this almost unending task
when the relationship was clearly one of authority, and the occasion
therefore as far as possible asexual. Even in such circumstances there
One has to remind oneself that these are girls, Sitting in front of one,
writing or repeating their latin; that this is for oneself a new relation
of the sexes; and after all tis hard to realize that it is new; it seems so
natural, so independent of sex.
the
class barrier was fraught with difficulty. The general rule was that any
London the Haymarket was the principal area for higher class prostitu
82
Hugh Cunningllllm
in
different ways, were confmed in a world where they were more the
objects than the subjects of leisure. As such neither they nor their men
folk could contemplate any lowering of both sex and class barriers
except when the relationship was overtly authoritarian or patronising,
There was one further reason, and a most important one, for the
creation of sports and other leisure activities from which the working
class was excluded. llLis took three fonns. First, middle-<;iass infiltra
it did
It, It rna , be argued, not because of some unrelated ideology
of sex,
?
but preCISely because that ideology was bound up with compulsions
of
class. The perfect lady of the mid-Victorian years, removed not only
from woddly c ncems, but also from household ones, was a symbol
?
of her husband s wealth and status. She was part of the leisure class
b
mewhat the sae way as an unemployed man was
.
compulSJon. And while
III the latter case the opportunities to be
enjoyed in leisure we
cruelly curtailed by lack of money, in the
fonner they were reSlncted by a concern for the maintenance of status.
Conspicuous leisure and conspicuous consumption were a mark:
status, their utility for purposes of reputabitity lying in the clement
waste common to both - waste of time and effort, or waste of goods,
for nnancial reasons to marry, sought an outlet for their sexual urges.)4
( . . .) It is true that towards the end of the century women of all
classes gained more autonomy in the pursuit of leisure, but in the mid
but in
83
sports and other leisure activities which might previously have been
in
the
whereby the fonnal and public concert replaced the salon. By the
1840s
upper middle class was symbolised by the creation of the Musical Union
which replaced both the aristocratic Concerts of Ancient Music and the
now had an institutional fonn suited to the needs of a new elite which
was both aristocratic and upper middle class.3s
In hunting the challenge came a little later. The first step was to dis
all classes.
in the
18405
Surtees was attacking publicans who for their own profit got up hunts
of bag foxes for what he called the 'riff raff of the countryside', and
Scrutator in 1861 hoped 'not to see any revival of that state of things
wltich existed in the latter part of the eighteenth century, when few
84
8S
Hugh Cunningham
pak, kept. up by a
manufacturing towns were without a subscription
.
.
ofthelr ti
me, injury
to
_- and apprentiees, to tnc great loss
.
"",
dub 0f c1er
.
"
-g l1bOUf0
f
lisatIOn
t
h
demora
oel
e
general
and
OJ'
nlrv
oou
the surrounding
hood'. The poor were now firmly exc\ded, not that they had ever
played much part in the spo . but the ou dle class was accepted. hat
.
capItal,
ilway was an mfiux of nuddkdass
happened in the age of the ra
and greater participation by middle-class and frequently urban people.
There can be little doubt that the desire for exclusivity was the. mst
,
Jnportant
reason for the failure f the hope that class coniliahon
i
,
,
,
might be achieved in lClSure, QUite sunply the Industnal Revoluuon ad
The second way in which one can see a thrust towards the exclusion
of the poor lay in the appropriation of sports which were previously
1- -I
.
being that
tone, being associated with the pub and gambling, A young solicitor in
the 1860s had to break off his engagement when his fiancee's mother
discovered that he took part in athletics. Precisely at this time, how
In
those who made a profit or living from them, but also anyone who 'is a
15
years, and the middle-class ethos was never fuUy imposed on either
sport_
[" .J
The third fonn taken by the thrust to exclude the working class was
again this is most obvious in sport. It was in these years that mountain
Cycling, for cxample, in the 1870s was 'a middle-class male pastime
with a sprinkling of aristocratic participants' . The class nature of the
new sports was apparent too in the development of golf. The major
period of growth in England carne at the tum of the century, but in its
English
marked b y strong class distinctions. The clubs fonned in the 1870s and
Epsom, Epping Forest and Tooting Bee. Such courses led to disputes
with other users of common land. As Cousins writes, 'in 1887 golf in
classes, and was regarded with indifference, if not with suspicion and
aversion, by the uninitiated majority' ,37
class which gained at least part of its identity from its possesslOn of
.
leisure, the spending of that leisure in exclusive and status-enhancmg
uity in securing for itself the desired exclusivity. In the seasid sorts,
for example, it appropriated to itself fashionable seasons wlthin the
,
year as well as whole areas of towns. In all. this it. behave no dlffrently
from the leisure class of early modern Urnes; Indeed It was this very
It was, In conSCIousness
of the growth of class feeling in the first half of the century, to halt
on
them, and doing it in such a way as to emphasise, they hoped, the SplOt
of community, not of class.
Their efforts were doomed to failure. Community can hardly be
created when the wish for it comes almost exclusively from onc side of
the class barrier, It is even less likely to do so when some of the promo
ters of the ideal are concerned solely to assimilate, not to give and take.
the marks of
86
itself
1
ar
cass
.
Iutlan
- 10
- Iclsure,
h
so
e
t
to It
seemg
in
and
concern about class division,
it both inflated the importance of leisure and helped in the process of
delimiting it. Leisure had iw.posed upon it perhaps the supreme task
confronting the ruling Victorian middle class, that of improving class
reiations, and there coukt be no greater testimony to its new stature.
The task imposed upon it, however, was too great. If anything in the
third quarter of the centu!), and beyond, leisure became more rather
than less confined by class boundaries as new class-specific entertain
ment flourished. And leisure itself proved to be something which could
not simply be utilised to serve the immediate purposes of a hegemonic
middle class. [ . . .1
{Our understanding of change during the Industrial Revolution
explicitly or implicitly, been shaped by a certain kind of thi-nlcing.]
There was, it seemed, an ok! traditional, rural, pre-industrial society
which yet had enough dynamism in it to generate the Industrial Revo
lution, and that in tum transformed every aspect of people's lives, and
necessarily their leisure; hence 'the vacuum'. By the 18305, this line of
argwnent continued, despite some survivals, this older culture was
eITectively dead, wiped out by the pressures of industrialism, urbanisa
tion, evangelicalism and a reactionary government.
Then came new initiative from above, whether in the form of
rational recreation or in the provision of modern commereiaJ enter
tainment. And in the context of a vacuum, rational recreation had
sufficient attraction to appeal to members of the working class; hence
that linking of the respectable of all classes against the rough, and the
theory that the key divisions were within rather than between classes.
This hypotheticaJ structure, I have argued, was misleacling. The
modes of thinking about cultural change were vitiated in two funda
mentaJ ways. First, because culture was seen as something passive,
reflecting, but for odd survivals, an economic base; this is a kind of
thinking, without the Marxist language, to be found very frequently
in anti-Marxist writers. Indeed in recent years the crudest economic
determinism has been voiced by those on the right. And secondly,
and following from this, because human society was split up into
various !iCparate sections - 'culture', 'economic activity', 'politics',
'thought', and so on.
This brings us back to Thompson, for it was precisely these errors
which he avoided. Yet these very cmphases in Thompson's work were,
one may suspect, directed as much against orthodox Marxists as against
conservatives. For Marxism is of course very precisely concerned to
establish Ihe degree to which history is delennined; and Thompson, it
could be argued. seemed to want. in a rotllantic way, to escape that
Hugh Cunninglutm
87
alld Literature. 40
The basic problem may be put in this way. Many, whether or not
they call themselves Marxists, write or think in fundamental agreement
with Marx's famous formulation of the relationsltip of base or infra
structure to superstructure in the 1859 Preface to A Contribution to
the Critique ofPolitical Economy :
In the social production of their life, men enter into definite rela
tions that ;lre indispensable and independent of their will, relations
of production which correspond to a definite stage of development
of their material productive forces. The sum total of these relations
of production constitutes the economic structure of society, the real
foundation, on which rises a legal and politicaJ superstructure and to
which correspond defmite fonns of social consciousness. The mode
of production of materiaJ life conditions the social, political and
intellectuaJ life process in general. It is not the consciousness of men
that detennines their being, but, on the contrary, their social being
that determines their consciousness . . With the change of the
economic foundation the entire immense superstructure is more or
less rapidly transformed . . .
This kind of thinking, crudely interpreted, lies behind much of our
n
i terpretation of cultural change in the Industrial Revolution. The
economic foundation changed, goes the argument, hence so did 'the
entire immense superstructure' which is taken, without question, to
include leisure. Now if we accept this crude interpretation of what
Marx was saying, then, if the argument of this book has any validity,
Marx was clearly wrong; the relationship of leisure to the cconomic
structure was exceeclingly complex, and not a simple one-way process
of n
i fiuence; leisure cannot be reduced to or explained in terms of
something else. The problem we are left with, however, is to gain more
understanding of the relationship between leisure and the economic
structure, and to see in what ways leisure was 'detemtincd'.
In the passage quoted above I deliberately omitted parts which
modify the crude force of Marx's formulation. Marx in the remainder
of the passage , and both he and Engels in their later lives, qualified the
88
no amount
1859 statement. It may be, as Williams suggests, that
qualification will remove the difficulties of the formulation, and that
we should abandon the language of base and superstructure, but that is
more easily said than done. Whether or not we retain it we must be
clear of two things. First, with regard to determination. Many Marxists,
uncomfortable with the notion of strict economic determinism, have
argued that the base does not strictly detennine but merely sets limits
to the fonn of the superstructure. This, Williams argues, is not enough:
we must look not only for 'the negative determinations that are ex
perienced as limits' but also for positive determinations which may be
pressures either to maintain or otherwise 'a given social mode'. In any
real social process, writes Williams, there is 'an active and conscious as
JlUgh Cunninghmn
89
hOwever, its legitimacy for all could be accepted; hegemony had been
totally defeated.
LeisUTeJ
The same could be said for what might be called the idealist expres
What people did in their spare time was not always or often uplifting,
it might b e irritating or annoying, as at Bank Holidays, but it was nO
longer a threat to hegemony. The outcome of a century of battles over
the problem of leisure was that for the dominant culture leisure was
part of the dominant culture's concern. For since the later nineteenth
specific
fact that it is something active and changing, not simply a resource, but
century both the provision and the control of leisure have, from the
But, and
for the mass of lhe people were counterposed to the work ideals of the
industrialists. And it was a political, social and moral problem for its
practice, and the ideology bound up with that practice , could be
threatening, disorderly and immoral. Its legitimacy for the people was
denied:
debating both the importance and the nature of what they are studying.
both tamed and legitimate because separated from the other concerns
of people's lives.
Notes
1. On Egan, J.C. Reid, Bucks and Bruisers (London, 1971); D1'. M iller, The
Ufe of a Showman (London, n.d.).
2. I.M. Butwin, 'Seditious Laughlet', Radical Hiltory Reiew, no. 18 (1978),
pp. 17-34.
90
Hugh Cunningham
3 W Nicholson The Struggle for a Free Stage 111 London (Boston and New
York, '1906); C. Bar er, 'The Chartists, Theatre, Reform aod Resear ', Theatrt
;
Quarterly, vol. I (1971), pp. 3-10, and his 'A Theatre for the cople Ul K.
.
Richards and P. Thomson, ESJQys on Nineteenth Qntury Brlt/sh Thttltre
(London,1971).
.
4. p. Etlan, Boxialla (1st edn 1812, repro Leicester, 1971), p. 333.
5. W. Hone, The EcryDay Book, 2 vol!. (London, 1826, 1827); Table
Book (Loodon, 1827); Year Book (London, 1832);T. Frost, The Old Showen
and the Old London Fair, (1st cdn 1874, London, 18Sl);Circus Life and Circus
Celebrities (1st edn 1875, London, IS81); and The Lives ofthe Coniurors
.
(London, 1876). On Frost, see B. Sharratt, 'Autobiography and Class ConSCIOUS'
ness', unpubllihOO Univ. of Cambridge PhD thesis, 1973.
6. E.l1. Bostock, Menageries, Circuses and Thttltrel (New York, 1972),
pp. 5-6; P. Egan, The Life ofall Actor (1st edn 1825, repro London, 1904),
pp. 20()-2.
7 . Nicholson, Struggle for a Free Stage, pp. 240 fr; A.H. Saxon, Enter Foot
and Horse (New Haven and London, 1968), pp. 89-93, 153-61, 16870.
8. R.D. Altick, The ShaWl ofLondon (Cambridge, Mass., and London,
1978), pp. 41H4.
9. L. JameS,Print and IhePeople /8/91851 (Loodon, 1976), p. 84; R.
Pearsall, Victorian Popular Music (Newton Abbot, 1973), p. 28; J .H. Plumb, The
Commercialisation of Leisure in Eighteellth<entury England (Reading, 1973).
10. P. Burke,Popular Culture in Early Modem t:urope (London, 1978),
pp. 3-22, 270.86; RM. Dorson, The British Folklorists (Chicago, 1968), pp. 1-43.
II. W. Wiodham, Speeches in Par/wment, 3 vol!. (London, 18l2), vol. 3,
p.315.
12. Sportillg Magazine, September 1832, p. 359; D.P. Blaine, An Em:yclo
paedia ofRural Sports (London, 184O), p. 718; R. Wood, Victorian Delights
(London, 1967), pp. 35, 39.
13. G. Combe, The Constitution ofMan, Sth edn (Edinburgh and LamiaI',
IS47), p. 28S; Household Words, vol. VI (1852), pp. 133-9; P. Egan, Book of
Sports (London, 1847 OOn), p. 56.
14. M.R. Mitford, Our Vii/age, S vols. (London, 1824-32), p. 169; J. Lawson,
Letters to the Young all Progress i1/ Pudsey During the Last Sixty Years
(StannirJglen, 1887, repro CalJban Books, Fide, 1979), pp. 62-3.
15. J. Ford, Cricket, a SociDl History 17001835 (Newton Abbot, 1972),
p. 123; W. llowitt, The Rural Life ofEngland (2 voh. 1838, repr., I vol. Shannon,
1971) vaL li, pp. 273.a; S.C. of the House of Lords to inquire into the Laws
respecting Gaming, PP 1844 (604), vol. VI, q. 234.
16. W.F. Maodle, 'Games People Played: Cricket and Football in England ard
Victoria n
i the Late Nineteenth Century', Historical Swdies, vol. 15 (1973),
p. 5 1 1 , and 'The Professional Cricketer in E1and in the Nineteenth Century',
Labour History, 110. 23 (1972), p. 2 ; H.S. Altham and E.W. Swanston, A l/istory
of Cricket, 4th edn (London, 1948), p. 88; C.L.R. James, Beyond a Boundary
(London, 1976) , p . 159.
17. R. Bowen, Cri
cket (London, 1970), pp. 106-19; JameS, BeYOlld a Bound
91
93
l.
on
Mafek
ing
.
flight
was not aggressIOn but relief after the disasters of the
'black
week.' There was little hooliganism or violence. It has recent
ly been
established that not workers but students and clerks fonned
the loutish
jingo mobs which broke up proBoer meetings and
ransacked the
property of 'little Englanders.'4 Recent research also sugges
ts that the
Boer War was not the main concern of working-class
voters in the
'khaki election' of 1900. The poll was below average and the
decisive
issues poorer Lo??on constituen ies "ere local and materia
,:
l hg
i h
.
.
rents, Job oppouruties, JewlS
h lITHnlgraUon, the protection of declining
trades and the lmprovement of the water supply .s Finally,
the
ment figures show that workers did not volunteer to fight in recruit.
the war '
any significant numbers unil
t the return of unemployment in
1901
These qualifications are important, but it is unlikely that
they wouid
92
.
have done much to assuage the anxiety felt by radicals and socialists
at the time. For. if the working class did not actively promote the
jingoism, there can be no doubt that it assively ac,,:ui
sccd to it. [. . .J
Modem historians have tended to belittle the anXIeties of Masterman
and the perplexity of radicals and socialists. Standard interpretations
o f the period, 1870-19 14, have tended to concentrate on the great
waves of trade union expansion, the growth of socialism, the founda
tion of the Labour party, the conversion of the working class from
liberalism, the demand for social reform and the beginnings of the
welfare state. Phenomena like Mafeking and the prevalence of conser
vatism among the working class in a large city like London, when dis
cussed at aU, have generally appeared as accidental or aberrant features
of a period whose basic tendency was the rise of labour and the mount
ing pressure for social refonn. When attempts have been made to
explain such deviations in the Boer War period, they have concentrated
abnost exclusively upon short term causes and subjective factors:
dissensions within the liberal Party; the absence of a 'charismatic'
figure like Gladstone. [ .] In reality, weakness of platfonn, absence of
effective leadership and feeble organization were symptoms rather than
causes of the lack of vitality in London working-class politics. The
failure of radicals and socialists to make any deep impression on the
London working class in the late Victorian and Edwardian period had
deeper roots than subjective deficiency. Underlying it were longer tenn
structural changes in the character of London working-class life which
made attempts at political mobilization increasingly difficult. What
Mafeking and other imperial celebrations portended was not so much
the predominance of the wrong politics among the mass of London
workers, but rather their estangement from political activity as such.
There was general agreement that the politically active working man of
the time was a radical or a socialist. Loyalism was a product of apathy.
One of the features of this period which has generally received little
attention from historians was the emergence of a distinctively new
pattern of working-class culture in the years between 1870 and 1900:
a type of culture which literary critics like Hoggart were to label
J It [is] impossible to explain the
'traditional' in the 1950s.7 [
behaviour and attitudes of the working class during this epoch outside
the context of this culture and the material situation which it represen
ted.
In this paper, I shall attempt - very tentatively - to trace the con
ditions of emergence of a new working-class culture in London and to
delineate its characteristic institutions and ideology. Given this task,
however, it must be borne in mind that nineteenth-century London not
only gave birth to a new Working-class culture, but also to a new form
of middle-class culture based upon an increasing convergence of outlook
. .
94
between the middle class and the aristocracy. Both these 'cultures' must
be examined, for it is impossible to understand the one except in rela
tion to the other. By juxtaposing the two, I hope to explain the emer
gence of a working<lass culture which showed itself staunchly imper
vious to middle<lass attempts to guide it, but yet whose prevailing tone
was not one of politicaJ combativity, but of an enclosed and defensive
conservatism. In this way, I hope to open up a different line of
approach to the problem of London politics in the age of imperialism
and to go a little way towards reconciling the cultural, economic and
political history of the working class. ( . . .J
It was only at the beginning of the twentieth century - in London
at least - that middle<lass observers began to realize that the working
class was not simply wilhout culture or morality, but in fact possessed
a 'culture' of its own. Charles Booth's observation that the London
working class was governed by 'strict rules of propriety,' but that
these rules did not necessarily coincide with 'the ordinary lines of legal
,
or religious moralitY, 8 may appear bald and incurious when compared
with the work of later connoisseurs like Orwell or Hoggart. Nevertheless,
it signalled the beginnings of a new attitude towards the working class.
Of course, there had been anticipations. Henry Mayhew, ahead of his
time and class in so many respects, had gestured unsuccessfully towards
this idea in his primitive anthropological distinctions between 'wan
dering' and 'civilized' tribes.' But Mayhew'S approach found no echo
in the slum tife literature of the ensuing forty years. London workers
were 'heathen.' 'Civilization' had not reached them. (. . .J When
missionaries from 'civilisation' ventured into that 'Babylon,' they were
confronted by 'terrible sights: and if struck by guilt or fear, they recal
led the stories of Dives and Lazarus or Jacob and Esau. The terms,
'working classes' or 'toiling masses' carried no positive cultural connota
tions, for they signified irreligion, intemperance, improvidence or
immorality. Indeed, it was often difficult for these strangers from the
'civilized' world to discover where the 'working classes' ended and
where the 'dangerous classes' began. For crime, prostitution, disorder
and sedition were aho thought to lurk in these poor regions, hidden
from the gaze of the wellto-do, and when left to fester in this 'nether
world,' could suddenly break out and threaten the town.1O (. . .1
17ze working ckm lacked 'cillilizatioll' berouse it was hidden away
alld rell/Olled from it: The imagery of this language and the situation
which it represented was itself a novel product of the Victorian period.
[. . J
Eighteent11<entury writers had often been perturbed by the 'inso
lence of the mob' but the mob was in no sense geographically isolated
from the more prosperous districts of the town. ( . . .1 Masters, traders,
journeymen and labourers not only inhabited the same areas, but often
9S
96
dct aehed ar senti-detached villa with its walled garden and obsession
with privacy aspired in miniature to the ill. USICR
' 0f a country estate,"
, Police A7t and the 1832 Reform
Shilibeer's omnibus, the Metropolitan
Bill inaugurated a new pattern of class relations 1.11 London.
In the forty years after the Refonn Bill, this process of segregation
and differentiation completed itself. By the 1870s. it had become part
of the natural order of things. (. . .J Only sixteen years after 1832, the
middle classes were enrolling as special constables to aid the Duke of
Wellington against the Chartists, and by the 1870s they were generally
voting ConscIVative. Evangelicalism and Utilitarianism, originally
distinct and to some extent opposed philosophies, increasingly coales
ced. [. . .J By the time the Charity Organization Society was founded
in 1869, the evangelical and utilitarian traditions were scarcely dis
tinguishable . The social basis of this coalescence was the ever more
insistent middle-class striving towards gentility. [. . .J
Moreover, this style of life, if not its material standards, was increa
singly adopted by the growing army of derks, teachers and new 'profes
sional' men. Not to compete for these trophies, or at least the
semblance of them, was to invite ostracism. [. . .J
In general, middle-class incomes were rising. Even so, gentility of
this kind was expensive, especially for those whose incomes could not
match their aspirations to status. Sacrifices were necessary. The age of
marriage was postponed and from the 18705 the size of families began
to be restricted. Subtle savings were made in that part of the household
budget not on public display. Needlework, ostensibly for charity, often
supplemented the family income.Wi In the mid-Victorian period, pru
dence and thrift [ . . .J were not merely the battle cries of economists
and politicians. They were integral necessities of middlelass domestic
economy.
How then, did these new aspirants to gentility regard the 'unwashed'
proletarians c
ed together in the smoky regions which they had
left behind? In times of prosperity and stability, they probably thought
little about them at all, since their major concern was
. to create a life
style as far as possible removed from them. [ . . .J
But in times of political disturbance and economic depreSSion, this
complacent self-absorption gave way to fear and anxiety. [. . .J At
these times of insecurity, fears for property were combined with a
great emotive yearning to restablish personal relations between the
classes. The enonnous popularity of the novels of Dickens in the late
1830s and 18405, with their nostalgia for Christmas spirit and tradi
tional personal benevolence, was an expression of this desire.17 But this
was only a phantasy solution, a wish fulfllment. In reality, relations of
benevolence could only be re.established by proxy. So money was
invested in missionary organizations designed to eradicate pernicious
ramm
97
ustoms and dangerous class prejudices from the poor, and to promote
cceptance of the moral and political code of. their superiors. The
oliceman and the workhouse were not sufficiCnt. The respectable
;nd the well-to-do had to win the 'hearts and minds' of. the asses to
the new moral order and to assert their right to act as Its pnesthood.
Propertied London had no need of the new industria religion . of
Comte, its ascendancy was to be established through the JrnplantatJon
of self-help and evangelical Christianity.
.
.
In the Victorian period, there were three major waves of anxiety
among the propertied classes about the behaviour and attitudes of tle
London working class.18 The first was a response to the uncertaUl
conditions of the 18405 and early 1850s. There was anxiety about
cholera about Chartism and the Revolutions of 1848, about the inrush
of Irish' immigrants and the deteriorating condition of artisans threat
ened by the expansion of the 'dishonourable' and sweated trades. [ . . .)
The second peak of religious and philanthropic energy occurred
between 1866 and 1872. Anx..iety was less intense and certainly less
widespread than it had been in the 18405. Nevertheless, these .were the
years of the Second Refonn Bill and the Paris Commune, of high bread
prices coinciding with high unemployment in the East End, of another
cholera epidemic and almost equally lethal outbreaks of scarlet fever
and smallpox. The country as a whole was stable, but in London the
number of paupers rose dramatically and the. working class ws suspec
led of republicanism. The spate of refomung cocem which thse
uneasy years produced, is reOected n
i the fonda.b?n of e Chant
Organization Society, the beginning of OctaVIa Hill s housmg expen
ments, the promotion of church-run woren's clubs, Edwar?
Denison's residence in the East End, the foundatIOn of Dr. Bamardo s
East End Juvenile Mission, James Greenwood's journalistic investiga
tions of the 'wilds' of London and Ruskin's Fors CIovigero. But despite
the demonstrations, unemployed marches and over-filled stone yards,
the problem of order was never acute. By 1873, the last traces of
anxiety had passed away.
The third wave of insecurity reached its peak in the year.; between
1883 and 18S8. It was a period of low profits, of high unemployment,
of acute overcrowding, of another threatened visitation of colera and
of large scale Jewish immigration into the East End. Artisans were
known to be secularist and to support Henry George's single tax propo
sals; unemployed and casual workers were suspected f harbouring
violent solutions to their misery and appeared to be fallmg under the
sway of socialist oratory. Forebodings were inc.read by .the uncertai
ties of the Lrisb situation, by suspicions of police mefficlency and eVI
dence of municipal corruption. The reaction to this situation can be
seen in the sensational journalism of Andrew Mearns, G.R. Sims, Arnold
98
White and W.E. Stead, in the novels of Gissing and the first investiga_
tions of Charles Booth. Attempts to re-establish harmony ranged from
Barnett's Toynbee Hall and Besant's People's Pawce to the Salvation
.
clviliz
mg actlVlty. The first was to use legislation to create a physical
, . ?
.
?
tlOn and Artisans Dwell
mgs Acts demolished rookeries and slums and
dispersed their inhabitants, while model dwelling companies
and philan.
.
.
throplc
housmg trusts provided what propertied London considered
to
be more appropriate working-class housing. Habits of order and
regu
.
lanty were enforced through the insistence upon regular payment
of
rent and through detailed regulatory codes governing the use of
facili.
ties. The presence of the caretaker was designed to ensure that the
rules
were obsetved. Even the architectural design of these buildings
, as
George Howell noted o f the Peabody blocks, was intended
to insure
'regulation without direct control.'19
ing'
.
(drunken , unprovld
ent) they were instructed to apply to the work
house. The C.O.S. was a logical complement to the reforms in
London
99
poor law administration which occurred at the end of the 1860s. The
intention of these reforms was to make the workhouse effectively
deterrent to the able-bodied pauper and to abolish outdoor relief.
1851
ment classes, coal and blanket clubs and penny savings banks were
Victorian period was considerable. Old haunts o f crime, vice and disease
were demolished and their inhabitants scattered.
[.
housed
189,108
[ . . .J
1891, these blocks
. .1 The sites
TIle social and economic functions of the pub had been reduced;
drinking hours had been restricted and children had been excluded
from the bar. Cock.fighting, bearbaiting and ratting had all but died
out. Gambling had been driven off the streets. 'Waits,' 'vales' and other
traditional forms of 'indiscriminate charity' had been increasingly
1868.
Southwark, St. Bartholomew and the other great London fairs had been
abolished. Craft drinking rituals had declined and S1. Monday had
IOJ
ith lile men. Dealing with middle-class intruders, like paying the rent
all other activities pertaining to family expenditure and the upkeep
the home, was the province of the wi.fe . [ . . .J
.
If efforts to christianize the working class were largely a .failure,
efforts to induce temperance appear to have made even less unpact.
[. . . J At the end of the century, Booth.reported that drunkenness had
dc..::reased but that drinking was more WIdespread .than befre. The pub
remained a focal point of local working-class life. But ts ole .had
changed. It had been shorn of many of its former economIC uncb.ons
d was now more narrowly associated with leisure and relaxatIOn.
omen used pubs more frequently, and so apparently di courting
couples. StraightfOlward heavy drinking had becoe less Wldespread,
was testified by the virtual disappearance of the gm palace. But there
:d been no dramatic shift. Frequent and heavy bouts of drinking
remained common in traditional London trades and jobs requiring great
physical exertion. in the long term, th7 meration of drinking habits
depended upon the increase of mecharuzauon and th ecrease of ove.r
crowding. Neither of these tendencies was charactenstlc of London m
the period before 1914.25
The results of the pressures exerted by poor law officials, chaty
organizers and selfhelp advocates to induce thrift amng the wrki
ng
class were similarly disappointing. The bulk of the working class did not
adopt middle-cl.ass savings habits. What saving here was among the
casual workers, the unskilled and the poorer a
r1.lsans was not for te
purpose of accumulating a sum of capital, but for the pur.ch of artic
les of display or for the correct observance of ritual oC':3SI0ns. '!'bus the
'goose club' run by the publican to ensure a good Chnstmas dinner, or
the clothing clubs providing factory girls with fash.ionaly cut dresses
were much more prevalent and characteristic forms ofsavrng than mem
.
bership of a friendly society which was confined to the better p&d and
regularly employed.26 The one form of insrance comm?n among the
poor, death insurance, was typical of theu general at
htud towards
thrift. The money was intended, not for the subsequent mamtenance
of dependants, but to pay for the costs of the funeral. If one thou&1!t
obsessed the minds of those in poverty, it was to escape a pauper s
funeral and to be buried according to due custom. [ . . .]
Mor gcnerally, evidence about patterns of spending among the
London poor suggests that a concern to demonstrate self-respect was
infinitely more important than any forms of saving based upon calcula
tions of utility. When money was available which did not have to be
spent on necessities, it was used to purchase articles for display !ather
than articles of use. [ . . .] This concern for display and for keepmgup
appearances was not confined to the poo.r, it ,,:as predominant through
out the working class. Even the well p&d artisan who could afford to
'II d
103
104
105
107
, more likely to
Conversation was less likely to concern trae matters
more often,
but
extent,
certam
a
to
re n."
" common interests , politics
proVlded. by
d
ucatlon
e
ary
element
J
[
.
.
The
.
nment.
sport and entertai
of artisan
solvent
r
anothe
yet
as
acted
to
have
appears
Act
the 1870
Ifaditions of self-education. [ . . .J
.
.
The combination of declining industnes, the breakdown of skilled
of hoe
crafts into a mass of semi-skilled processes, the prevale ce
Ulg
h
0 comJ?ut
growt
the
culture,
ntred
of
work<e
a
decline
the
work,
.
lly
politica
made
and the deadening effects of elementary education
of
were
ies
tendenC
these
of
demobilizing impact in London. Some
produce
y
generall
not
did
they
But
course present elsewhere in Britain.
such demoralizing results. What intensified the purely negative aspect
of these developments in London was the continuation of small-scale
production combined with chronic unemloyment. The problem of
unemployment, as Paul de Rousier s wrote l1l the I 890s, was largely a
d
problem of London.4s In the years before 1914, London was strande
of
system
a
and
die
to
refused
which
op
system
worksh
between a small
factory production which had scarcely begun to. develop. Its wrkfoce
was divided between a hlghly skilled but technically conSClVatlve eltte
and a vast mass of semi-skilled and unskilled workers subject to varying
degrees of under-employment. In the 19205 and 193Os, ndo wa to
be transfonned by the development of light industry on Its penphenes.
But few would have prophesied titis transformation before 1914.ln the
late Victorian and Edwardian period, rents and prices rose, wages
remained stagnant and unemployment a permanent feature of the land
scape. Yet London continued to grow at a phenomenal rate. The new
suburbs were Oooded with rural immigrants from the depressed and
conselVative home counties. With the exception of a few outlying areas
like Woolwich or Stratford ' London working-class districts were shlfting
and unstable. The eviction of the poor from the central area continued
and everywhere 'shooting the moon' (moving furniture from an apart
ment after dark before the landlord collected the rent) was a familiar
feature of London working<lass life - one need only think of perhaps
the best known of all music hall songs - My Old Man said follow (e
i stitution may have grown l1l
Van. The family as a working-class n
the
i portance, but in London there was nothing very settled about
m
home.
nt featres
e
Co.()p and professional football, twO of the most pro
till. f nunr
of the new working<lass culture of the north, .were s
importance in London. like trade unionism and fnendl socletes, then
strength was greatest in more stable and homogeneous mdustnal ar?as.
If we wish to find a peculiarly metropolitan fonn of the new workmg
class culture it is to the music hall that we must look.
'
Once lhe evidence is sifted critically, the music han can give us a
108
crucial insight into the attitudes of working-class London. But this can
only be done if working-class music haU is disentangJed from its West
End variant with which it is generally confused.
Music haU was both a reflection and a reinforcement of the major
trends in London working-class life from the 1870s to the 1900s.
'Music halls and other entertainments: wrote T.H. Escott in 1891, 'are
as popular among the working men of London as they are the reverse
with the better stamp of working men out of it.'46 Music hall was a
participatory form of leisure activity, but not a demanding one. The
audience joined in the chorus, but if they didn't like the song or the
sentiments expressed. they 'gave it the bird,' and it was unlikely to be
heard again. [. . .)
In working-class districts, where the multiplicity of occupations, the
separation of home from workplace and the overcrowding and
impermanence of apartments made any stable community life very diffi
cult, the local hall with its blaze of light and sham opulence, its
laughter and its chorus singing, fulfilled, if only in an anonymous way,
a craving for solidarity in facing the daily problems of poverty and
family life. Music hall stood for the small pleasures of working-class life
- a glass of 'gJorious English beer,' a hearty meal of 'boiled beef and
carrots: a day by the seaside, Derby Day and the excitements and
tribulations of betting, a bank holiday spent on Hampstead Heath or in
Epping Forest, the pleasures of courtship and the joys of friendship.47
Its attitude wasa lillIe bt
i o/what you/ancy does you good. Music hall
was perhaps the most unequivocal response of the London working
class to middle-class evangelism. As Marie lloyd told her critics in 1897,
You take the pit on a Saturday night or a Bank Holiday. You don't
suppose they want Sunday school stuff do you? They want lively
stuff with music they can learn quickly. Why, ifT was to try and sing
highly moral songs they would fue ginger beer bottles and beer mugs
at me. They don't pay their sixpences and shillirigs at a Music Hall
to hear the Salvation Army.48
Or, as Ihe Era had put it in 1872,
The artisan tired with his day's labour, wants something to laugh at.
He neither wants to be preached to, nor is he anxious to listen to the
lugubrious effusions of Dr. Walts or the poets of the United
Kingdom Alliance,49
Music hall appealed to the London working class because it was both
escapist and yet strongly rooted in the realities of working-class life.
This was particularly true of its treatment of the relations between the
es
Gorelh Stedman Jon
109
::
je,
110
stolid it
III
112
113
In the 1860s many of the songs sung in the working-class halls were
still antiaristocratic and populist in tone. They were still at a halfway
stage between the okl street ballad and the mature music hall song.64
Even Frederick Stanley. defending music hall interests before a Parlia
Workhouse door
comic
element.' 'I
Charles
the workhouse casual ward. 'Be ofT you Iramps,' exclaims the harsh
Godfrey's On
janitor. 'You are not wanted here.' 'No,' thunders the tattered veteran
'I
am
not
wanted
here,
but at Balaclava, 1
the est End because officers from the household brigade complained
that It was bad for recruiting.60
Nowadays, nothing goes down better than a good patriotic song, for
suggests the oddity of the music hall audience in their political bent.
became actively and self consciously Tory. There were two major rea.
sons for this development.
The first reason was the growth of a second audience for music hall
guards officers from SI. James's, military and civil officials on leav
popular event in its annual calendar was boat race night, a drunken
saturnalia in which all breakable objects had to be removed from the
reach of tipsy 'swells.'61 There was little
imperial playgrounds and the working-class halls, except for the import.
ant fact that these new palaces drew upon the working-class halls for
many of theiT perfonners. Furthennore, as the entertainment business
politics are played out as they are far too common. Talking of that
Every such allusion must be ConseIVative.66
This first reason for music hall Toryism, the growth of an aristocratic
and jingoist clientele, had little to do with any marked shift in working.
class opinion. But the second reason affected slum and West End music
halls alike. This was the increasing association between Toryism and the
drink trade. In the first
Harrison has shown, the pub was not the exclusive property of any
attacked both the central pleasure palaces and the working-class halls
In
1894, Mrs. Onniston Chant of the Social Purity League challenged the
114
,.r;..e,;:
?f d ";n" and the JjcltatJon of prostitutes. But the young 'sweUs' and
toffs of th penod who regarded the Empire as their spiritual home
.
y reSisted th restriction of their prerogatives. On the Saturday
V1olen
foUowmg the erection of the screen, 200-300 aristocratic rowdies
.
smashed It down again with their walking sticks and paraded in triumph
.
around leicester Square, waving its fragments at the passers-by. The
.
nngleader of this group then made a speech to the assembled crowd'
'You have seen us tear down these barricades tonight; see that you pun
.
down those who are responSible for them at the coming election.'"
The speaker was the young Sandhurst cadet, Winston Churchill .
Music hall proprietors, IM'ells, cabmen and bizarrely, George
.
Shipto
, the Secretary of the London Trades Council (he also ran a pub
Square), enrolled in defence of the Empire's rights. A
U:lcester
ff
?
,
Sportlng League was fonned. According to one ofits spokesmen:
They were now approaching the County Council Election
s and it
would be the duty of every true lover of sport to see
at no
'wron'uns' got on the c.ouncil again . . . These faddists came upon
.
them m all shapes and kinds, either as members of the Humanitarian
League, or the anti-Gambling League, or Anti-Vaccination . They
.
we.te all acting
on the same principle, trying to interfere with the
enjoyment and pleasures oflhe people.1I
th
This incident was no doubt the origin of the myth, assiduously cultiva.
ted by the upper class after the war, of an affmity of outlook between
the "top and bottom drawer' against the 'kill-joys' in between. It is true
however that for different reasons, both the proletarian halls and the
West End pleasure strip were devitalized in the succeeding twenty years.
The West End beeame more decorous after the Wilde scandal while the
'
woking-dass halls were bought up by the Moss-StoU syndicate whose
poli was to replace the 'coarseness and vulgarity' of the halls, by the
gentility and decorum of the Palace of Variety. Music hall entertain
ment was given its fmal kiss of death with the achievement of a Royal
Command Pcrfonnance in 1912. Music hall artistes removed from their
acts any allusions that could be considered offensive or coarse and
'a lover of true
vainly tried to win the approval of King George V
Bohemianism,' according to Conan Doyle's unctuous deSCription of the
proceedings.71
If these had been the only tendencies at work in music hall since the
_
Jones
Gareth Stedman
115
ent posiion in
b e difficult to eplain its pr.o m
1870s, it would
. which also
..elghtles
mld
the
was
It
But
culture.
dass
working
London
loved
music-hall
best
and
greatest
witnessed the emergence of the
Kate
Tich,
Uttle
Elen,
Gus
,
Uoyd
Marie
performers - Dan Leno,
London
poor
from
sprang
all
who
artistes,
These
others.
and
J{arney
greater accuracy than their
backgrounds, articulated with much
masses. Although
predecessors the mood and attitudes of the London
they sang or
End,
East
the
and
West
they were popular both in the
about the
but
party,
ve
Conservati
the
or
Empire
the
spoke not about
misfor
and
marriages
romances,
holidays,
drink,
food,
ations,
occup
i from their son that the specincity of
tunes of the back streets. It s
London working-class culture can best be assessed.
Unlike the ballad, the son of these perfonners expressed neither
deep tragedy nor real anger. They could express wholehearted enjoy
ment of simple pleasures or unbounded sentimentality in relation to
objects of affection. But when confronted with the daily oppressions
of the life of the poor, their reactions were fatalistic. In the middle of
the century, Mayhew had written,
Where the means of sustenance and comfort are fIXed, the human
being becomes conscious of what he has to depend upon.
If, however his means be uncertain - abundant at one time, and
deficient at another - a spirit of speculation or gambling with the
future will be induced, and the individual gets to believe in 'luck'
and 'fate' as the arbiters of his happiness rather than to look upon
himself as 'the architect of his fortunes' - trusting to 'chance'
rather than his own powers and foresight to relieve him at the hour
of necessity.73
This was precisely the attitude to life projected by the London music
hall. The two greatest products of that culture, Dan Leno and Charlie
Chaplin. play little men, perpetually 'put upon'; they have no great
ideals or ambitions; the characters they play are undoubtedly very
poor, but not obviously or unmistakably proletarian; they are unmis
takably prod ucts of city life, but their place within it is indetenninate;
their exploits are funny but also pathetic; they are forever being chased
by men or women, physically larger than themselves, angry foremen,
outraged husbands, domineering landladies or burly wives; but it is
usually chance circumstances, unfortunate misunderstandings, not of
their own making which have landed them in these situations: and it is
luck more than their own efforts which finally comes to the rescue.
The art of Leno and Chaplin bring<; us back again to the situation of
the poor and the working class in late Victorian and Edwardian
1 16
117
sociologists and literary critics dates, not from the first third, but from
the last third of the nineteenth century. This remaking process did not
obliterate the legacy of that first formative phase of working-class
history, so well described by Edward Thompson. But it did transform
its meaning. In the realm ofworking-<:Iass ideology, a second formative
layer of historical experience was superimposed upon the fmt, thereby
colouring the fmt in the light of its own changed horizons ofpossibility_
s
i only a preliminary analysis, based upon the study of
The struggles of the first half of the century were not forgotten, but
into trade union activity and eventually into a political party based
class culture. It
one city, and any conclusions that might b e drawn from it can only be
whose effect was both to emphasize the distance of the working class
why after 1870 London pioneered music hall, while coal, cotton and
ship-building areas in the north generated the most solid advances in
trade unionism.74
Trapped in the twilight world
based. The strength of its own political tradition had not been founded
on the factory. It therefore registered the new situation in predomi
nantly cultural forms. But music hall did spread to the provinces and
trade unions were slowly able to secure important pockets of strength
'traditional'
working-class
attitudes
analyzed
by
contemporary
This belief sustained the activities of moderate Chartists like Lovett and
Vincent no less than Harney and O'Connor. It was this half articulated
conviction that had made Chartism into a mass force.
this conviction
The rise of new unionism, the foundation of the Labour party, even
the emergence of socialist groups marked not a breach but a culmina
tion of this defensive culture. One of the more striking features of the
social movements between 1790 and 1850 had been the clarity and
l iB
Noles
1. The Hean ofthe Empire (London, 1901), p. 3.
2. Times, 2 1 May 1900.
3. lIeart ofthe t:mpire , pp. 7.
4. Richard Price, A n Imperial War and the British Working Class (London,
1972), Ch. IV.
5 . Price, lmpf!Tial War, Ch. III ; Henry Pelling, Social Geogrophy ofBritish
ElectiOIll 18851910 (London, 1967), pp. 45, 47,52,57; Pellin8, Popular Politicl
tmd Society in LAte ViC/orUm Britain (London, 1968), p. 94.
6. Price, Imperial War,Ch. V.
1 19
1883), p. 1004.
20. Henry J ephson, The Sanitary Evolution ofLondon (London, 1907), p. 368.
21. See Harrison, Drink alld the VictoriallS, pp. 244-5 .
22. Booth, Life and Labour, Series 3, vol. 7, p. 426.
.
.
23. A misS-ionary in Hackney told Booth, 'You ClUl buy a oongregat,?n, but It
melts away as soon as the payments cease,' Booth, Life lind lAbour Seoes 3, vol.
I, p. 82.
24. Ibn., SCI:ies 3, vol. 5, p. 190.
25. I bid., Final Volume, Notes on Socia1 lnJ1uences, pp. 5974; and lICe also
Harrison Drink ond the Vietariam, Ch. 14.
26. Se CtwlCl Manby Smith, Curiosities ofLondon Life (London, 1853),
pp. 310-19; Booth, Life andLabour, Series I, vol. I , pp. 106-12;1. Franklyn,
The Cockney (London, 1953), pp. 183.4.
.
.
27. For the attitude of class 'E' - Booth's typleallondon arusan, .:e Booth,
Life and Lohour, Series 2, vol. 5, pp. 329-30 ; for the atmosphere of the parlour,
see Fred Willis, 101. Jubilee Road. London. S.E. (London, 1948), pp. 1023.
28. Alexander Paterson, AcroSJ the Bridges (London, 1911), p. 41.
29. Booth, Life ond Lobour, Final Volume, p. 51.
30. James Greenwood, Low Life Deeps (London, 1876), p. 176.
.
31. For contemporaI)' defences of musie hall, see the deposition hand m by
.
Stanley,
on
behalf
of
the
London
Musie
Hall
Prop.netors
Assocmtlon
Frederick
to the Select Committee on Theatrical Licenses and RegulatIOns, rp, 1866, XVI,
Appendix 3; IICC also John Hollingshead, Min;ellonies, Stories and /:'ssoys, 3 vols.
.
(London, 1874), vol. III, p. 254; and thedramaic riCle
cnt Scott's tnbute
(a CharlCl Morton, 'the father of the haUs' on hIS etghttcth birthday, Harold
Soott, The Eorly Doors (London, 1946), pp. 136-7.
32. Ewing Ritchie, Do)'s and Nights in LondOtl (London, 1880), PP: 44-5 ;
33. For the early development of musie hall in London see AppendIX (0
XVIII, iv.
35. Ibid.,q. 5171.
36. Booth,Life and lAbour, Final Volume, p. 53.
37. Ibid., Series 3, vol. 5, p. 12l.
38. Ibid., Series 3 , vol 7, p. 425.
39. See ibid., Series 2 (industry series) passim, for commuting habits of
skiUod workers in various trades, and see Series 2, vol. 5,Ch. m, for summlU)'. ln
the last quarter of the nineteenth century, working:Jass use of commuter trans
port increasod sharply, but even in the 1890s a high proportion of workers
tnvcllod long distances to work on foot. See T.C. Barker and Michael Robbins,
A Hislory ofLondon Tranrport (London, 1963), vol. I, pp. xxvi-xxx.
40. George, London Life, p. 168.
41. Booth, Life and Labour, Series 1, vol. I, pp. 50-1.
42. Paterson, Across the Bridges, p. 32; M.E. Lome,An Englishman s Castle
(London, 19(9), p. 183.
43. See Booth, Life and Labour, Series 3, vol. 5 , p. 330; M.E. Lome, The Next
Street but One (London, 1907), p. 20.
44. The care of the house and of babies fell particularly on girl children. See
Greenwood, Low Life Deeps, p. 140.
45. P. de Rousiers, The Labour Question in Britain (London, 1896), pp. 280,
357.
46. T .H.S. Escott, Engfalld. III People, Polity and Pursuits (London, 1891),
p. 16l.
47. Sce Colin Macinnes, Sweet Saturday Night (London, 1967). pp. 106-23.
48. Quoted in Daniel rauon, Marie LliJyd and Music Hall (London, 1972),
p.57.
49. A.E. Wilson, East End Enrertainmellt (London, 1954). p. 215.
50. Greenwood, Low Life Del'ps, p. 140,
51. Paterson, AcroSl the Bridgl'S, p. 130.
52. Booth, Lifl' and LAbour, Final Volume, p. 45.
53. McGII'n//On 's Star S<mg Book (1888), no. 10, p. 4.
54. Ibid., no. 4, p. 3.
55. Wibon, &1$1 End Entl'rtainment, p. 183.
56. See 'The Dock LabouItlrs' Strike' and Ihe 'Dock Labourer' in Nl'w and
Popuwr Songs (1889).
57. Macinnes, SWf'et Saturday Night, p. 108.
58. ACCOIding 10 one repon, Disrneli used 10 send his seeretary, Monty Cony,
to the music hall to Usten in on MacDermoll's song to assess the extent of support
for his foreign policy. See J .8. Booth (cd.), Sevl'nty Years ofSong (London,
1943), p. 38.
59. MacG/en/lOn 's Song Book (1896-7), DO. 105.
60. Scott, Till' Early Doors, p. 215.
61. Soo Sluart and Park, The Variety Stagf', pp. 191 et seq.
62. Far9on, Marie Lloyd, p. 60.
63. Rcal oonvergence was more pOSSIble in Variety than in Musie 1Iall.. Even
Marie Uoyd found herself booed in the East End music hall, when !he attempted
to sing some of her more risque West End number. See FaIson, Marie LliJyd,
p.75.
64. See for inSlance the songs ofJ.A. Hardwick in Cbnric alld Selltimental
Music 1101/ Song Book (nA. 11862) ,
65. SC 1866, Appendix 3, p. 307.
121
----- - -
123
[)arko SUllin
W E L LS AS T H E TURNING POINT OF T H E S F
TRADITION
Darko Suvin
being the Time Machine itself. The strange world is elsewhen or else
where. It is reached by means of a strange invention or it irrupts
directly into the Victorian world in the guise of the invading Martians
or the Invisible Man. But even when Wells's own bourgeois world is not
Egg,' or the
!,Tllall towns and villages of southern England in The War 0/the Worlds
ness, monstrous beasts, giants and ogres, creepy crnwly insects, and
Things outside the light of his campfire, outside tamed nature - into
an evolutionary perspective that is supposed
to be validated by
Darwinian biology, evolutionary cosmology, and the fin-de-siede sense
man, thus setting up the model for all the Bug-Eyed Monsters of later
chauvinistic SF. But the most memorable of those aliens, the octopus
like Martians and the antlike Selenites, are identical to 'The Man of the
Year Million' in one of Wells's early articles (alluded to in The Waro/
and The First Men ill the Mooll. With the exception of the protagonist,
who also participates in the inner story, the characters in the outer
perous bourgeois England, are reluctant to credit the strange newness_
By contrast, the inner story details the observation of the gradual,
menaces such life and its certainties b y behaving exactly as the bour
conscience of an imperial civilization that did not wipe out only the
bison and the dodo: 'The Tasmanians, in spite of their human likeness,
if the Martians warred in the same spirit?' (The War 0/ the Worlds,
Book I , Ch. I).
As WeUs observed, the 'fantastic element' or novum is 'the strange
lion that renders Griffin invisible, or, obversely, a new way of seein g
literally, as i n 'The CrystaJ
Egg:
122
the other end: that is why his men d o land on the Moon and his Mar
tians on Earth.
Science is the true, demonic master of all the sorcerer's apprentices
in Wells, who have - like Frankenstein or certain folktaJe characters
.1
reveaJed and brought about destructive powers and monsters . [.
.
New,
powerful, since it brings about the future, science is a hard master. Like
Moreau, it is indifferent to human suffering; like the Martians, it
explodes
a room -
124
J)arko Suvin
This science is no longer, as it was for Verne, the bright noonday cert
ainty of Newtonian physics. Verne protested after me First Men in the
Moon: 'I make use of physics. He invents . . . he constructs . . . a metal
which does away with the law of gravitation . . . but show me this
metaL' For Wells human evolution is an open question with two poss
ible answers, bright and dark; and in his fim cycle darkness is the basic
tonality. The cognitive 'match' by whose small light he detennines his
stance is Darwinian evolution, a name which fitfully illumines man, his
hands (by interaction of wttich with the brain and the eye he evolved
from ape), and the 'patch he stands on.'5 Therefore Wells could much
later even the score by talking about 'the anticipatory inventions of the
great Frenclunan' who 'told that this and that thing could be done,
which was not at that time done' - in fact, by defining Verne as a
short-term technological popularizer.6 From the point of view of a
votary of physics, Wells 'invents' in the sense of inventing objective
untruths. From the point of view of the evolutionist, who does not
beieve
l
in objects but in processes - which we have only begun to
elucidate - Verne is the one who 'invents' in the sense of inventin
g
banal gadgets. For the evolutionist, Nemo's submarine is in itself of no
importance; what matters is whether intelligent life exists on the ocean
floor (as in 'In the Abyss' and 'The Sea Raiders'). Accordingly, Wells's
physical and technical motivations can and do remain quite superficial
where not faked. Reacting against a mechanical view of the world, he is
ready to approach again the imaginative, analogic veracity of Lucian's
and Swift's story-telling centred on strange creatures, and to call his
works 'romances.' Cavorite or the Invisible Man partake more of the
flying carpet and the magic invisibility hood than of metallurgy or
optics. The various aliens represent a vigorous refashiOning of the
talking and symbolic animals of folktale, bestiary, and fable lore into
Swiftian grotesque mirrors to man, but with the crowning coUocation
within an evolutionary prospect. Since this prospect s
i temporal rather
than spatial, it is also much more urgent and immediate than Swifl's
controlled disgust, and a note of fairly malicious hysteria is not absent
from the ever-present violence - fires, explosions, fights, killings, and
large-scale devastations - in Wells's SF.
The Time Machine (1895), Wells's programmatic and (but for the
*IThe Greek satirist (c. ADIlS< AD200) whose The History narrated imaginal}'
lravel$1
125
.IWilliam
126
roof. The loss of the narrator's vehicle and the ensuing panic of being
a castaway under alien rule (in TIle War o/the Worlds tltis is inverted as
hiding in a trap with dwindling supplies) recurs time and again as
an
effective c1iff.hanger. Above all, (. . .J Wells's whole first cycle is
a
reversal of the popular concept by which the lower social and biological
classes were considered as 'natural' prey in the struggle for survival.
In
their turn they become the predators: as labourers turn into Moriocks
,
so insects, arthropods, or colonial peoples tum into Martians, Selenites,
and the like. This exalting of the humble into horrible masters supplies
evolution from the author's present. Nature has become not only
malleable - it was already becoming such in More and particularly in
Swift - but also a practically value-free category, as in bourgeois
scientism. At the end, the bourgeois framework is shaken, but neither
destroyed nor replaced by aroy livable alternative. What remains is a
very ambiguous attack on liberalism from the position of 'the petty
bourgeois which will either tum towards socialism or towards
fascism.'8
127
J)arkoSuvin
111e
Illyisible Mall
in advance of his time within an indifferent society and the symbol ofa
humanity that does not know how to use science. This makes of him
almost an old-fashioned 'mad scientist,' and yet he s
i too important
and too sinned against to be comic relief. The vigour of the narration,
polates n
i to xenobiology the catastrophic stories of the 'future wars'
subgenre, ( . . .1 descends in places to a gleeful sensationalism difficult
to stomach, especially in its horror-fantasy portraiture of the Martians.
TIle immediate serialization in the US yellow press, which simply
suppressed the parts without action, made this portraiture the most
influential model for countless later Things from Outer Space, extend
able to any foreign group that the public was at that moment supposed
to hate, and a prototype of mass-media use of Sf for mindless scare
mongering (inaugurated by Orson Welles's famous 1938 broadcast).
(. . .J Of course,
explicating openly his main motifs and devices. The usual two narrators
*[See bdow Tile Firs! Men in tile Moon and Tile lsumd o/Dr. MoreDU.]
[Jarko Suvin
The usual rmal estrangement fuses biological and social disgust into
Bedford's schizophrenic cosmic vision of himself 'not only as an ass,
but as the son of many generations of asses' (Ch. 19). Parallel to that,
Cavor formulates most clearly the uselessness of cosmic as well as
earthly imperialism, and articulates a refusal to let science go on serving
them (had this been heeded, we would have been spared the Galactic
Empire politics and swashbuckling of later SF). Finally, Bedford's
narration in guise of a literary manuscript with pretences 10 scientific
veracity , combined with Cavor's narration in guise of interplanetary
telegraphic reports, exhibit openly Wells's ubiquitous mimicry of the
journalistic style from that heyday of early 'mass communications'
the style of 'an Associated Press dispatch, describing a universal night.
mare.'9
Yet such virtuosity cannot mask the fundamental ambiguity that
constitutes both the richness and the weakness of Wells. Is he horrified
_
129
(1888).]
Darko Suvin
131
nium has always been the most colourless part of Christian apocalypse.
What is worst, Wells's fascinated sensitivity to the uncertain horizons of
humanity gives only too often way to impatient discursive scolding,
often correct but rarely memorable. A visit to young Soviet Russia
(where his meeting with Lenin provided an almost textbook example
of contrasts between abstract and concrete utopianism) resulted in the
perhaps most interesting work in that series, Mcn Like Gods (1923),
where Wells gave a transient and somewhat etiolated glimpse of a
Morrislike brightness. But his work after the rust World War vacillated,
not illogically for an apocalyptic writer, between equally superficial
optimism and despair. His pOSition in the middle, wishing a plague on
both the upper and lile working classes, proved singularly fruitless in
creative terms - though extremely influential and bearing strange fruit
in subsequent SF, the writers and readers of which mostly come from
precisely those 'new middle classes' that Wells advanced as the hope of
the future.
With all his strengths and weaknesses Wells remains the central writer
in the tradition of Sf. His ideological impasses are fought out as mem
orable and rich contradictions tied to an inexorably developing future.
Hc collected, as it were, all the main influences of earlier writers - from
Lucian and Swift to Kepler and Verne, [ . . .J from Plato and Morris to
Mary ShelJey, Poe, Bulwer,* and lile subliterature of planetary and
subterranean voyages, future wars, and the like - and transfonned
them in his own image, whence they entered the treasury of subsequent
SF. He invented a new thing under the sun in the time-travel story
made plausible or verisimilar by physics. He codified, for better or
worse, the notions of invasion from space and cosmic catastrophe (as in
Ius story 'The Star,' 1899), of social and biological degeneration, of
fourth dimension, of future megalopolis, of biological plasticity. To
gether with Verne's roman sciellfijique, Wells's 'scientific romances'
and short stories became the privileged fonn in which SF was admitted
into an official culture that rejected socialist utopianism. True, of his
twenty-odd books that can be considered SF, only perhaps eight or
nine are still of living interest, but those contain unforgettable visions
(all in the five 'romances' and the short stories of the early socio
biologjcal-cum-cosmic cycle): the solar eclipse at the end of time, the
faded flowers from the future, the invincible obtuseness of southern
England and the Country of the Blind confronted with the New, the
Saying of the Law on Moreau's island, the wildfue spread of the red
Martian weed and invasion panic toward London, the last Martian's
lugubrious ululations in Regent's Park, the frozen world of 'The New
Accelerator,' lile springing to life of the Moon vegetation, the lunar
society . These summits of Wells's are a demonstration of what is
author of the scientific romance
l
t,Sir Edward BulwerLytton (1803-73), noveist
132
i SF, of he
t
cognitive shudder peculiar to it. Their poetry is
possible n
based on a shocking transmutation of scientific into aesthetic cognition,
and poets from Eliot 10 Borges have paid tribute to it. More harrowing
than in the socialist utopians, more sustained than in Twain, embracing
a whole dimension of radical doubt and questioning that makes Verne
look bland, it is a grim caricature of bestial bondage and an explosive
liberation achieved by means of knowledge. Wells was the fltst signifi
cant writer who started to write SF from within the world of science,
and not merely facing it. Though his catastrophes are a retraction of
Bellamy's and Morris's utopian optimism, even in the spatial disguises
of a parallel present on Moreau's island or in southern England it is
always a possible future evolving from the neglected horrors of today
that is analyzed in its (as a rule) maleficent consequences, and his hero
has 'an epic and pUblic . . . mission' intimately bound up with 'the
major cognitive challenge of the Darwinist age.'14 For all his vacilla
tions, Wells's basic historical lesson is that the stifling bourgeois society
is but a short moment in an impredictable, menacing, but at least
theoretically open-ended human evolution under the stars. He endowed
later SF with a basically materialist look back at human life and a
rebelliousness against its entropic closure. For such reasons, all subse
quent significant SF caIl be said to have sprung from Wells's Time
Machine. ( . . . J
Notes
t. H.G. WeUs, 'Prefacc' to Sel'Cll Famous Novels (New York, 1934), p. vii.
2. Patrick Purinder (ed.), H.C. Weill: the CritiCQI Herilage (London. 1972).
pp. 57. 1012.69.
3. Geoffrey West, H.C. Wells (Pennsylvania, 1973), p. 112.
4. Robert M. Philmus and David Y. Hughes (cds.), Early WrilinKS in Science
and Sciellce Fiction by H.C. Wells (Berkeley, 1')75), "p. 30-1.
5. Parrinder,II.C. Wells: tile OitiCQI Heritage.
6. WeUs, 'Preface' to Seven FamousNovels.
7. Christopher Caudwell, Studies alld Further Studies in a Dying Cultllre
(New York, 1971), pp. 76 and 93.
8. V.S. Pritchett, Tile LMng Novel (London, 1976), p. 128.
9. P:uTinder, H.C. Wells: the OitiCQI Heritage.
10. Patrick Parrinder, H.C. Wells (New York, 1977), pp. 69, 273.
I \ . H,G. Wells. 'Author's Preface', The Sleeper Wakes (London, 1921).
12. H.G. WeUS, l:.'xperime/lt ill Autobiography (New York, 1934), pp. 551,
206.
13. Ibid.
14. Pnrrinder,H.G. Wells.
(1975).
Thames
134
135
John Walton
i
Industry
136 n,e Rise ofthe Entertanmellt
denied this power until the eve of the First World War, and it proved an
invaluable asset to Blackpool, enabling her to present a unified pronIe
rather than relying on the fragmented efforts of competing entertain_
ment companies, or the uncertain bounty of railway companies or ad
hoc conunittees. At first, an existing policy of fetes to extend the
season at either end was continued, supported by an alliance of profes_
sional men and retired residents of independent means; but in 1881 the
emphasis shifted to the attraction of a mainly working-class clientele by
lhe use of picture posters. Supported largely by publicans and directors
of the entertainment companies, this policy was pursued with energy
and success, but its effects were confined to the established working
class season between mid-July and early September. Apart from Whit
suntide and, increasingly, Easter, Blackpool was relatively quiet for the
rest of the year.
Determined attempts to revive a 'better-class' spring or autumn sea
son were delayed until after 1900, when the influence of respectable
mopkeepers and the retired on the borough council was in the ascend
ant. Rapidly increasing rateable value - the product of the success of
the 'popular policy' - meant that the cost of newspaper advertising and
autumn attractions did not involve the diversion of funds from the
poster campaign, and a varied programme each September and October
from 1906 was supported by the entertainment companies and the rail
ways, who had previously been unwilling to accept short-term losses in
the hope of long-term gains. The September and October season was
stimulated by :>lIch novelties as motor-racing and an aviation meeting,
and its success was assured by the discovery of the popularity of elec
trical illuminations in 1912. By Ihis time a significant new market for
Blackpool's attractions had at last been created. Press comments suggest
that the autumn visitors were largely middle-class and white-collar,
from clerks with a spare week's holiday upwards, and the importance of
a Musical Festival among the annual autumn attractions indicates the
probable significance of cultural pretensions or at least deferential
values. We shall see that such tastes were not completely neglected even
at the height of the season, but there is a clear difference in emphasis
and tone. Further evidence that 'respectable' visitors were overcoming
prejudices against Blackpool's proletarian reputation, at least outside
the most crowded months, is provided by the development of a limited
but valuable winter season, with the more prestigious hotels having to
turn away visitors at Christmas and on fme week-ends. Social zoning by
time was thus beginning to emerge in Blackpool by the early twentieth
century, but it was belated and limited in scope, especially when set
against the enonnous growth of the popular season.
To avoid the danger of becoming completeLy a one-class resort
during the late nineteenth century, Blackpool thus had to adopt an
137
101m Walton
138
John Walton
visitors and rowdy excursionists had to rub shoulders. In this area, the
social controls operated by the local authority were important.
139
concentrated from its frrst full season in 1872 on dancing and popular
spectacular, specialising in acrobats, fireworks and novelties rather than
the educational and 'improving' attractions advocated by its critics. The
III
Blackpool's shopping and entertainment centres became concentrated
between the railway stations in the original core of the town, an un
planned area of haphazard, narrow streets. In 1861 the central shopping
area consisted of two streets, both of which retained vestigial residential
functions; by 1901 almost all of the 1861 built-up area, including the
promenade between North and Cenual Piers, had become commercial
tion of the Raikes Hall pleasure gardens, were all sited in this area,
which attracted the full weight of excursionist demand for amusement
of all kinds.
Blackpool's permanent large-scale entertainment facilities were pro
or
activity by indi
vidual large landowners anxious to hasten estate deve
a wide geographical and social spectrum. This may have made for an
unusual sensitivity to changes in popular taste.
[.
investment was attracted from a wide area of Lancashire and the West
grander scale in the 1890s, London and Manchester became the main
ment remained important. The Tower and the Alhambra were heavily
capitalised
problems of over-capitalisation.
In 1887, the Winter Gardens also began to concentrate on the excur
sionist market under a new manager, William Holland, who had made
sionist soon led to the creation of the South Jetty, the present Central
Pier, by a splinter group of shareholders. Opened in 1868, the South
Pier, was opened in 1862, but its initial failure to discourage the excur
North Pier for the 'better classes' and thereby safeguarding the invest
resistance from some of the directors to this 'departure from our usual
but opposition remained among those who preferred prestige to profit.
The 'better-class' market was still not entirely neglected in central
sector itself.
The entertainment centres of the 18705 grew up between the piers
the original cast, as well as concerts and occasional visits from artistes
1889, offered Gilbert and Sullivan and West End comedies, often with
140
141
John Walton
which opened in 1894, also catered for the whole range of playgoers.
The main bastion of the 'better classes', however, remained the North
Pier, which was, as we have seen, at the 'respectable' end of the town. A
shilling was the minimum charge for orchestral concerts at the end of
the pier, and comedians were advertised as 'without one trace of vul.
garity'; on Sundays promenading facilities only were offered , and the
main attraction was the millinery on show in the 'church parade' after
morning service.
Despite the existence from 1893 of another pier offering restrained
and
the town's economy.
beach
of
the
rough-and-ready
amusements
associated
with
the
the
on
at this level, and in some cases by public opinion and the fear oflosing
of public order; issues were dealt with as they arose. Blackpool was
relatively late among existing resorts in acquiring local authority con.
excursionist custom.
Some of those whom the Corporation sought to regulate had very
Ifols, but in 1853 the need to regulate such services as cabs and
little support in the town. Itinerant hawkers for example, detested both
by shopkeepers and by advocates of the maintenance of the 'better
The 1853 Act and by-laws met Blackpool's needs until the changes
which began in the 1870s, when rising real wages coincided with exten
sions of the Lancashire Wakes holidays to bring a rapid increase in the
class' season
granted. Du
ring Whit-week and the July and August Wakes season the
over 350 in the late 1880s, although annoyance may have been reduced
101m Walton
The Rse
i 0/ tile Entertainment Industry
142
143
IV
During the 1890s lhe spread of the entertainment industry along the
coastline threatened the residential amenities which continued to
attract the 'better-class' to Claremont Park and South Shore. The
144
lImcllt Industry
The Rise ofthe Enterla;
John Walton
145
twcnty-six acres of key coastal building land to the north of the estate
in 1894, and ensured that it was developed to a high standard, with all
alllusements excluded. The value of the North Shore as a haven for
lhe 'belterclass' visitors who, as the restaurateur T P. Taylor pointed
out, did more shopping and put more money into the town than any
others, was fully appreciated in BJackpool. The combined efforts of the
Land Company and Corporation thus ensured continuing social
diversity in the town's visiting population in spite of the pressures
exerted by excursionist amusements.
v
Despite the changing social structure of its visitors during the latter
half of the nineteenth century , and the pressure for change exerted by
those who catered for the tripper, Blackpool was able to reconcile
quantity with quality and please the working-class visitor while retain
ing a share of the 'better-class' market. (. . .J The conflicting forces of
an expanding working-class holiday season on a scale unmatched else
where, with its attendant commercialization and the spread of popular
amusement, and an established middle-class season based on quietness
and sedate, 'improving' recreations, were reconciled in Blackpool. The
rise of two relatively select social areas, and their subsequent resistance
to the spread of the tripper along the coastline, was coupled with the
adoption of a policy (if that is not too positive a word) of moderate
regulation in the town centre, and an apparent reduction of class ten
sions with regard to leisure activities as the century wore on. [. . .J
147
George Perry
24
George Perry
been a wildly expensive picture;its cost was probably less than 60,000,
which was small beer by American standards, Its fust release grossed a
Korda's balance sheet the next time he approached the City bankers.
What is more, the internationaJ prestige gained for the British industry
for Litis one filin was staggering. Korda was acclaime d as the new genius
.
,quota qUickie
producmg
s , cheap, speedily produced nlms to meet the
dean s of. the
enters' Quota. The first \VaS Wedding Rehea
rsal
I
uch , In sPlte of Its low budget, was well-received
. The brothers con
.
tmued ma
king these films, swapping the direction
around between
them. Merle Oberon, Robert Donat and Emlyn
Williams were among
the new performers who found their faces on the
screen as a result of
Korda's london Films.
open its coffers. Grandiose plans were set in hand for building an enor
Films, which were to cost more than a million pounds. Korda, mean
while, continued to make fllms on rented sound stages, His next starred
the German actress Elisabeth Bergner, and was directed by her husband,
Dr Paul Czinner. It was Catherine the Great, and included in the cast
just made Scarlet Empress with Madene Dietrich. Although the public
failed to take to the Korda mm, its taste and worthiness only enhanced
IUs prestige with critics and backers. But this evaporated when his next
film, 111 c Private Life of Don Juan , appeared. The title part was played
by the paunchy, muscle-bound Douglas Fairbanks Sf, his last fUm, with
his best swashbuckling days by now well behind him. The film was a
!l
keep the Prudential happy. His luck returned with the next mm, TIle
novel which made nearly half a million pounds on its rust run. The
director was Harold Young and the cast included Leslie Howard, Merle
Ludo,V1CO
146
WhiCl
VIII. In a way
j
1
strident Arthur Bliss score and ambitiously designed sets, its intriguing
theme and Wellsian propaganda that humanity's hopes lay with the
149
George Perry
first of the Gaumont-British thrillers was TIle Man IIIho Knew Too
Milch ; it followed an unsuccessful and dismal attempt at a light musical
comedy costume picture, lIIaltzes from Viemw, which was one of
SCientists
Ren Clair, had their exteriors shot in the grounds of the unfi
nished
Denham Studios, as did the second H.G. Wells subject,
17le Mall Who
Could Work Miracles . The day before the studios were to be opened
a
fire occurred causing 45,000 worth of damage. The Prudenti
al as w ll
as meeting the building costs in the first place had also
insured it with
themselves and so had to pay out for the repairs.
The first fUm to be made completely at Denham was
one of the
highwater marks of Korda's career, a careful,
tender, devoted
reconstruction of the life of a great painter, Rembra
ndt, who was
played with dignity and compassion by Charles Laughto
n, with Elsa
Lancl1ester as Hendrijke. Korda did not expect the
mm to be a
commercial success but he wanted the fust product of the
new head
quarters of London Films to be worthy of the industry
he had in such a
short time managed to transfoml. Korda was at the
summit of his
career; he had shown himself to be the foremost produce
r in Britain his
'
confidence, ambition, chann and sensitivity attractin
g attention for
British films all over the world. Korda mms were made
with an intelli
gent and careful eye on pubk
l taste and he was not afraid to run ahead
of it. Regrettably Rembrandt, an excellent picture, was
far ahead of its
time and languished in half-empty houses.
But Korda was not the only producer to force the
pace between
1933 and 1936. Another remarkable figure was Michael Balcon who as
'
head of production at Gaumont-British and Gainsborough
had abeady
set things rolling with Rome Express. In 1933, the year
of 17,e Private
Life of Henry VllI, he was responsible for several interesting mms
three of them directed by Victor Saville: Friday the n'irteen
th wit
Sonnie Hale, Jessie Matthews and Gordon Harker; I
lIIas a S y , an
accomplished essay into First World War romanticism
with Madeleine
Carroll, Conrad Veidt and Herbert Marshall; and the
best of the trio,
77le Go Companions, with Edmund Gwenn, Jessie Matthew
s and
John Gielgud, an adaptation of J.B. Priestley's novel about a travelling
concert party in the north of England. It was the
ftrst sound film to
eceive a Royal GaJa Performance. In the follOwing year Balcon capitaJ
lIed on the enonnous and unique talent of Jessie Matthe
ws and put her
into musicals where her magnificent legs and high, throbby
voice were
exploited to great effect. The first was Victor Saville's
superb Ever
green , an evocation of the Edwardian musical theatre as well as high
life
in the thirties, with a Rodgers and Hart score. This was followed
by First
a . Girl, It's Love Again, Head over Heels and others, the first two
again
directed by the prolific Victor Saville. Balcon also
lured Alfred
Hitchcock away from John Maxwell at BIP and set
him to work at
directing the kind of rUms he could do better than anybody
else. The
Hitchcock's worst m s
i takes, and an area into which he would never ven
ture again. The new thriller, from its shock opening to a thinly dis
guised version of the Sidney Street siege at its climax, was an exciting
fUm with his even more celebrated version of John Buchan's 111e
nirty-Nine Steps, a far cry from the novel, but a brilliant Him with
superb counterplaying by Robert Donat and Madeleine Carroll. The
Secret Agent in 1936 again featured Madeleine Carron, this time with
Peter Lorre and John Gielgud, and was loosely based on Somerset
His tastes, like Korda's, also embraced the elaborate historical type
1936 with
Nova Pilbeam
playing Lady Jane Grey, was Tudor Rose, directed and written by
i
Robert Stevenson, who in another age was to direct Mary Poppns.
Rhodes o[ Africa, in the same year, starring Walter Huston, Oscar
Homolka and Peggy Ashcroft, was, in comparison with the quiet
stylishness and restrained acting of the first fUm , a ponderous bore in
a style which HoUywood could plainly mount a great deal more success
fully. The director was Berthold Viertel, who also made Lillie Friend
from a novel by the author of n,e Constant Nymph, Margaret Kennedy,
in which Nova Pilbeam, one of the liveliest young actresses of the
150
lSI
George Perry
i increasing numbers,
overlooked genre of British mm began to appear n
the broad comedy pictures which featured comedians who had made
reputations for hilarious and earthy working-class humour in the music
halls. These fums were modest in intention - most of them never got
near the West End - but they did a great deal to provide a common
interest between the producer and the mass audience. Among the comics
it is fair to include Gracie Fields, the popular comedienne from Roch.
dale, wno made her ftlm debut in 1931 with Sally ill our Alley , and
through a series of delightful films in the thirties achieved the status of
Britain's highest paid star. Typical, for instance, was her 1934 ftlm,Sing
on the 'golden mile' and at the Pleasure Beach, gave a documentary in.
10 raise its own capital by selling shares to local interests, which would
benefit from a good cinema in the locality. After three years the Odeon
sight into how half the British population lived, while the comedy was
circuit had become me fourth largest in the country, with 142 theatres,
not enough, for Odeon's booking power was inferior to that of the rival
circuits, ABC and Gaumont-British. After much negotiation a deal was
young man, son of a famous music-halJ star, with a penchant for finding
directed by Thomas Bentley. This was Will Hay. who a year later
appeared in the famous guise of the seedy, uneducated, crooked school
master, Dr Twist, in
Boys
Will
Be Boys.
This company. unlike its other big American rivals. did not produce its
own HIms, but distributed the work of independent producers. It had
slice
of the
Artists' partners from 1935 was Alexander Korda, Deutsch now had the
parison with the amounts spent on importing mms into the country,
giant unit, controlling thirteen per cent of British cinemas and seven
teen per cenl of seals. But they were the better theatres, mainly first
run houses. Although MaxweU did indeed join the rival board the pro
was staggering - it was the age of the superstar, of Clark Gable and
Gary Cooper, Joan Crawford and Claudette Colbert. Carol Lombard
and Jean Arthur, and of course, Fred ASlaire and Ginger Rogers. In
the ranks of the exlUbitors, however, a new and important name had
posed merger did not occur, possibly because lhe American interests
monster. Twentieth-Century Fox, the majority shareholders of Metro
polis and Bradford Trust, who in tum were controUers of GB, objected
to the scheme and formed a new holding company in association with
152
153
George Perry
By 1936 Rank was poised for action. But another crisis was to inter
vene.
Union circuit, with 136 cinemas in 1937 boosting the total of theatres
owned to nearly a hundred more than the 345 of the GB group. Conse
Siumptim e
i terests out
quently , Maxwell was able to ensure that his exhibiting n
in overseas markets. One of the bad results of the 1927 Act, as had
been forecast, was the predominance o f 'quota quickies' n
i the
industry's production record, rather than large, well-made, prestige
he produced were religious shorts. His mission was to make films suit
able for church audiences, which would be equal in production stand
ards with the day-to-day output of the norma! commercial cinema.
Iilms. The former were cheap to produce and more likely to yield a
use of fUm s for sectarian purposes, and Rank had to fight hard . But in
initially wanted to make a film of TI,e Pi/grim s Progress but this pro
ject never materialized. Instead , the first film made by his new com
pany was set in a Yorkshire fIShing port and concerned the rivalry
between two families. Called The
Tum of the
The Tum
of the
As long as
the supply o f good American films was maintained, they could not lose.
These were the films that the public was eager to see. Consequently, the
pleased both the critics and Rank, who had ensured that although the
arms.
subject was a secular one its morality would be of a high order. In spite
of the prestige of a major placing in the Venice Film Festival the film
did not get a wide circuit release and so failed to recoup its costs. It was
get a stake in the new booming business. But there was one factor
that had been imperfectly calculated in the eternal optimism of the
film-makers. The home market was inadequate and incapable of
1935, after a row with the Ostrer brothers, resigned from Gaumont
grounds, once the estate of Heatherden Hall, wh..ich were put to frequent
use for exterior shooting.
was lent to the British fUm industry. The only alternative to profitability
154
would be bankruptcy. All the warning signs were present ; that they
i a measure of the euphoria of the mid-thirties. Many if
were ignored s
not most film companies had made insufficient profit to pay dividends
for several years. Waste and inefficiency were legendary and Korda's
previous year's trading. GB would cease to produce its own nlms, Ume
Grove was to shut down, Gaumont-British Distributors was to fold.
Henceforth GB News and the Gainsborough films made at Islington
would be handled by General Film Distributors. This solemn story
continued for many more months, with companies going bankrupt and
studios closing. Output for 1938 was considerably less than halfthat of
the previous year and the available studio space was only half-utilized.
The ten-year period of the
1927
155
George Perry
labour costs, and a rate of 1 per foot. With an almost inde cate equa
tion of money with artistic results a system of double and tnple quo s
.
was also instituted, so that a film costing 3 a foot counted as tWice Its
'
length for renters quota and 5 per foot three times. The Films Com
misSion idea, however, was rejected because it was felt that an enlarged
Advisory Committee, now called the Cinematograph Films Council,
,:,*
l
'art
seem too chauvinistic, special provision was made for speciaist.
up a British production wing was MGM, and Michael alcon, now cut
.
off from GB, was signed up to take control of an ambitIOUS programme
of Anglo-American fUms, each of which would justify its expense by
being treated n
i the United States as a normal MGM product The first
:
film was suitably transatlantic in tone, A Yallk at Oxford, directed by
O'Sullivan and Lionel Barrymore with the young British actress, Vivien
Leigh. The story, concerning the adventures of a brash Middle West
athletics student on a scholarship to the ancient cradle of learning,
made a mildly satirical poke at the eccentricities of both Anglo-Saxon
nations and was an entertaining box-office success. Baicon, unable to
achieve compatibility with Louis B. Mayer, left MGM in disgust and
Victor Saville stepped into his shoes. King Vidor, an extremely accom
plished Hollywood director, was responsible for the second MGM
British mm, an adaptation of an A.J. Cronin novel,
156
responsible for among other things two of the best Marx Brothers
mms, Nighl al tlte Opera and Day at the Races. Goodbye Mr Chips
also introduced Greer Garson to the screen. Allhough only seen for
a few minutes' running time the impression she made was strong
enough to guarantee a lengthy Hollywood career.
What rcatly made the three MGM rums stand out from most British
fllms of the time was their technical superiority. They had been made
with the gloss and skill of the Hollywood rum industry and proved
thai British technicians under proper guidance could produce work as
polished as the Americans. Had the brief MGM period continued, the
subsequent story would have been substantially different for all three
films had made money, not only in England but in many other coun
tries.
Output in other studios during the two or three years between the
beginning of the crisis and the even more drastic upheaval of the war
became erratic as the courts filled with bankrupt flim men. But by no
means were they completely fallow years. Korda, now ensconced in his
stately Denham studiOS, continued extravagantly to hire his directors
and stars from abroad (to say nothing of technicians: the standing joke
was that the three Union Jacks outside the studios represented the
three native Englishmen on the Korda payroll). ( . . .J Korda also
persuaded Robert Aaherty, a giant of documentary fIlms, to make
Elephant Boy n location with a young Indian, Sabu. Ultimately the
film was finished on the backlot of Denham, with elephants pounding
through the Buckinghamshire jungle, and the fllm is far from vintage
Flaherty.
Korda's extravagance, flamboyance and penchant for employing so
many foreigners, especially Hungarians, aroused xenophobic passions
among certain sections of the public, and articles appeared denouncing
him as the cause of the British fUm crisis. Undoubtedly Korda was a
brilliant and magnetic force in the cinema. Like many dynamic men he
could not do things by halves, and that included his failures which were
inevitably more spectacular and more catastrophic than anyone else's.
His genius was persuasive and when he turned on the charm even his
billerest enemies melted. Korda rode out the storm with the skill with
which he was to survive many others before the end of his career. It was
plain that no man had been so successful in raising the British flag in
other countries. Like many other exiles who have settled in Britain he
was motivated by a patriotism far more passionate than thai of many
Englishmen .
Herbert Wilcox, born in County Cork, Lreland, has also throughout
his long career vigorously waved the British flag. His cxultanlly trium
phant Victoria the Great arose from a request by the Duke of Windsor
during the brief period in 1 936 when he occupied the throne as King
a
157
George Perry
Edward Vlll. Alexander Korda was for once left at the post .. The f
was shot in five weeks, a remarkably short time for such a subject, With
Anna Neagle playing the Queen and Anton Walbrook Prince Albert. Its
treatment was episodic, being based on Laurence Housman's Victoria
Regina, which was more a series of sketches based on Victoria's life
.
than a play. The fdm was exhibited to the public a.t a psychOI08lally
appropriate time, and Britain, troubled by w?rseng. Euroan Situa
tion, gladly revelled in a frenzy of nostalgiC unpenalism. Wilcox f?l
lowed up the flim with Sixty Glorious Years , which was the same mIX
ture as before, except that the Royal Family granted permission for
certain sequences to be shot at Balmoral, and the whole fllm was made
in Technicolour. [. . .J
Michael Powell, a prolific but unnoticed director of the early
thirties, shot an impressive ftlm on location on the Scottish island of
Foula, TIle Edge of tile World, outstanding for its dramatic photo
graphy which captured the quality of the northern climate and the
beauty and grandeur of rocks and wild seas. Until then Pow:ell's work
had been mainly in quickies, but with this fllm he revealed himself as a
front runner in the new British realist school which was to emerge
properly in the wartime forties. An important fllm of 1937, again set
in Scotland but of a rather more amusing nature, was Stann in a Teo+
cup with Rx Harrison and Vivien Leigh, directed by Victor Saville and
Ian Dalrymple. In spite of the axiom that 'satire is what closes Saturday
night' this flim was very successful as well as witty. and demonstrated
that British flim comedy could sometimes work with subtlety.
In the broader vein George Fonnby and Gracie Fields continued to
be at the top of the box-office popularity ratings. George Fonnby ,,:,as
a comedian who had adapted particularly well to fUms, most of which
were constructed to a prescribed fonnula - George trying to hold ajob
down in spite of appalling disasters beyond his contIol and trying alS?
to win the girl in the face of opposition from a handsome, accompli
shed rival. There was always room for a song or two with the banjo
(always called a ukelele) and a regular number of .hurle pies, whi.te
wash buckets and paint cans. A chase or a sequence which a machine
goes out of control, such as the RAF aerobatic plane in /t's in tile Air,
was also mandatory. Most of the George Fonnby rums were directed by
Anthony Kimmins, later succeeded by Marcel Varnel, who at this time
was concentrating on Will Hay and the Crazy Gang. Varnel's \937 near
masterpiece of comic film-making was Oh Mr Porter! in which Will Hay
played an appalling country stationmaster, with Moore Marriott and
Grallam Moffatt as unco-operative platform stafr. Will Hay had a
particular skill in evoking sympathy even for the incompctnt scon
drels he usually played. In the following year he appeared m ConvIct
99 and in a parody, Old Bones of tile River, as a schoolmaster,
m
158
attempting the Les.lie Banks [ole o f the earlier ftlm. Films such as
these
were not noted for the amounts spent on them but they moved
at a
crisp pace and demanded little from their audiences beyond the
ability
to enjoy a good laugh. They were particularly popular in northe
rn
England and cinema managers knew that they could pack in
bigger
audiences than many of the best HoUywood pictures .
Alfred Hitchcock, whose days at GaumontBritish ended
with
Sabotage, made Young and Innocent (11le Cirl lllos Young in America),
159
George Perry
pictures which showed the fabric of life in holiday camps, stations and
Bank Holiday), a girl out for a good time who nearly comes to a sticky
end before she realizes the folly of her ways (Margaret Lockwood) and
a plausible young man (HUgil Williams) . Carol Reed managed to rise
above potentially banal material and confumed the promise he had
SoUllt Riding, from the novel by the tragic young author Winifred
Holtby dealing with local politics in a Yorkshire country lown; this
starred Edmund Gwenn, Ralph Richardson and Edna Best. It was con
structed with an eye turned to the realism of the documentary film
.
."ment , and its climax was a real event, the Coronation, as seen by
010 "
by DaVid M acDonald ,
uected
the local inhabitants. 17lis Mail ls News, d
Barry
K.
Barnes,
Alastair
Sim
and
Valerie
Hobson, was also an
with
extremely well constructed f11m with a pace and energy that reflected
credit on its writers, Roger MacDougall (who later became a successful
laywright) and Alan Mackinnon. A sequel was demanded and the same
P am went on to make This Mall ill Paris. And as the threat of war
te
a weII
became reality Michael Powell recalled the 1914-18 cnillct m
.
directed picture, 11le Spy in Black, with Conrad Veldt and Valene
German
U-boat
Hobson, which dealt with a crisis of conscience in a
commander.
After Michael Baleen's brief career at MGH had come to an end he
became in 1938 a partner with Reginald Baker in a company called
Salford, whose purpose was to tum out good prograrrrrne ftlms at
Eating Studios. On the resignation of Basil Dean, Balcon be me head
c:a
Strallger, had its West End showing as a second feature, but t e second,
n,e Ware Case, drew more attention . T1,ere Ain't No Jus lce, a lw
budget boxing expo, was an incisive examination of the pnze-fightmg
mrr:
for Balcon, 17,e Proud Valley, was actually a plea for the natio.nal
zation
i
of the coal industry, although it starred the powerful-voiced
m to
have had a soft centre with such a performer in the lead, yet II retamed
on the world situation. No films about the Nazi menace were made
before the war; British rllms kept a silence as close-lipped as any of the
appeasers, and spared the German government from the embarrassmnt
of criticism. Even documentaries did not look at the menace threatenmg
.
the entire world' it was left to the American series 11le March of TIme
S E R V I N G T H E NATION: P U B L I C SERVICE
B ROADCAST ING B E F O R E THE WAR
Paddy Scannell and David Cardiff
week by week an escape from reality into a fantasy world. The British
cinema was a lesser version of Hollywood, with men like Korda, Wilcox,
Open University.
TIle
ces, and survival depended on TIle Four Feathers and Victoria the Great
and Pygmalion ; it was the box-office subject which could equally well
have emerged from the studios of Hollywood that drew audiences and
profits.
endured before war. Had the decision been made when the bubble burst
was first invented, the Telegraphy Act (1 869) was passed giving the
would have collapsed. On the other hand, that might have happened
anyway if the war had not, paradoxically, while closing down studios
(WedeU, 1968, p. 56). In the early 1920s the Post Office was faced with
and recruiting its workers for the armed forces, brought an unexpected
demands from wireless manufacturers, who had begun to sec the large
salvation from the hard time that had undoubtedly been coming since
proper role to play in the national life, and the chaUenge was taken up,
merge into a single cartel to whom the Postmaster General eouk! grant
and aesthetics. At last British film had matured and could pass into its
a licence to broadcast. In the end they did, and formed the British
capital of 60 ,000 and revenues derived from the tcn shilling licence fce
for a rcceiver payable to thc Post Office (half of which went to the
Company), and from a percentage of the royaltics on the rcceiving sets
sold by the manufacturers (BBC Handbook, 1928, p. 37). Parliament
had decided that only one licence to broadcast should be granted at any
one time, so the Company was granted an exclusive licence to broadcast
161
162
for two years. This was extended for another two years after an officiaJ
commission o f inquiry (the Sykes Commission) had recommended that
aJthough the state should regulate broadcasting, it should not itself
operate the broadcasting system. In 1925 the Crawford Committee, set
up to examine the future of broadcasting, rejected free and uncontrolled
broadcasting for profit (the American system) and a service directly
controlled and operated by the state (Briggs, 1 9 6 1 , p. 330). It proposed
that broadcasting be conducted by a l'ublic Corporation acting as a
trustee for the national interest, and consisting of a Board of Governors
responsible for seeing that Broadcasting was carried out as a pUblic
service (Sound and TV services, 1964, pp. 2-3). It further recommended
that the British Broadcasting Company was a fit body for such a task,
and the Company duly became a Corporation in January 1927. Its
Managing Director, John Reith, became the first Director General.
The BBC began to operate under the authority of two documents,
each granted for ten years: the Charter, which prescribed the objectives
of the Corporation, how it should function, its internal organisation, its
financial arrangements; and the Licences and General Agreement be
tween the Corporation and the Postmaster General. This allowed the
BBC to establish broadcasting stations subject to the Post Office's tech
nical conditions relating to wavelength and the power of transmitters.
It prevented the BBC from broadcasting advertisements or sponsored
material, and defined the percentage o f the licence fee to be received
by the Corporation. The state reserved the right to appoint (and dismiss
if necessary) the Board of Governors; it also reserved an ultimate con
trol over the BBC in the right to veto any material to be broadcast by
the Corporation. In practice this power has selUom been used, and the
BBC has usually been granted autonomy in its day to day programming
and policies.
In normal times the state keeps the BBC on its toes not through the
threat of direct intervention but in a number of indirect ways. First,
the BBC has never had the righ t to broadcast in perpetuity . Its licence
has always been granted for strictly limited periods (usually ten years),
. performance has always
and Its
been subject to review. Various com
mittees have reported on its progress and made recommendations and
to this date the Charier has always been renewed. The effect has been
perpetually to remind the BBC of its dependence upon the state. Second,
the state controls the purse strings; only it can increase the licence fee,
about which it can of course prevaricate if displeased with the Corpora.
tion. Lastly , it controls the governing body of the BBC the Board of
Governors - which it call fill as it chooses.
The BBC was nol, however, defined simply by the Conservative
Government of the day. Whcn John Reith became manager in 1922 the
company became active in its own definition. In Broadcast over Brifain,
_
163
165
casting took on a more settled and permanent fonn in the latc twenties
and across the thirties, what came together then was not in any sense
1924
and
1927)
initial
It
was the government who set the terms for the Corporation, whose sub
realisation that there was now, and for the first time, since the vast ex
tension of the franchise in
whom possese
s d no formal schooling beyond the age of about fourteen.
Reith's efforts to secure the spread of knowledge and the enlarge
ment of opinion were constantly checked and thwarted between
and
1927.
1924
those terms. The independence of the BBC has always been a strictly
reialil'e autonomy; for while it has seldom been directly interfered with
news, talks and outside broadcasts to give listeners access to the political
processes and debates of the day. In all these areas he was hampered and
blocked by the powerful vested interests of the press and press agencies,
Between
That the BBC sided with the government in the matter is well known.
It had no option. To have done otherwise would have jeopardised the
1922
and
1924 1 9
very continuance of the Company and the new charter and licence, now
m
i portant programmes (a symphony concert, a talk by a national figure)
the Post Office and his own board of directors of the need to change
the status and constitution of broadcasting. He had done so in the belief
might 'feed' the rest with one of its own local products. Thus Cardiff's
that it would bring a genuine freedom not only from commercial inter
take, via Post Office trunk lines, 'simultaneous broadcasts' of news and
from the London station. Alternatively any one station in the nctwork
rather successful Christmas pan to, Singbad the Wailer (1925), was given
ests, but also from the restraints imposed till then by the state. He even
hoped that by proving the 'responsibility' of broadcasting during the
strike he would at last win the right to deal fully with the controversial
political and industrial issues of the time. When he read the draft terms
of the charter in late
were limited, and they very much depended upon what they could find
The nine main stations in these early years proJuced most of their
brieny, in the absence of the daily press, during the strike) were ex
10 get
they served a considerable degree of local pride. Their relations with the
these terms reversed, but the Postmaster General simply went behind
his back and blackmailed Lord Clarendon (chairmandesignate of the
new Board of Governors) into Signing the documents with the simple
threat of sign or be sacked. When finally the charter and licence were
publicly released as ...greed documents' Reith's indignation knew no
adapted themselves to the areas they served, and olTered not only enter_
tainment but a public service to their community of a rather different
When Leeds put on a charity concert for ailing children, when Uver.
pool ran a series about the city past and present during its Civic Week,
or when Sheffield let its university students put on a show in aid of
radio in its infancy which has scarcely yet been recovered. Something
valuable was lost, though it was hardly recognised at the time except
gramme frorn London and the Regional Programme produced from nve
centres serving thc Midlands, North, South, West and Scotland (later
Wales and Northcm Ireland were added). This reorganisation, planned
from 1925 onwards, was based on a number of factors. For technical
and economic reasuns it made bettcr sense to concentrate on a smaller
number of stations with high-powered transmitters to extend recep
tion to the whole of Great Britain, rathcr than to go on adding to the
number or local stations. Second, to allay the obvious criticism of the
167
unless there were very good reasons for not doing so. North Region
169
e SBC n
i to a
1938 one newspaper congratulated .him for making
ative as the Bank
national institution as thoroughly tYPiCal and represent
of England - i.e. safe, responsible and reliable, a bed-rock guarantor
of the nation's 'cultural capital'. of the existing order of things. The
question is how, by what material processes, was this achieved?
It was done through a careful and unceasing attention to all aspects
of the organisation of the system of distribution, to the character of the
programme channels, and lastly, crucially, to the form. content and
presentation of the repertoire of material that filled those channels.
Programmes remain the final register and bearers of institutional inten
tions and assumptions about the scope and purposes of broadcasting
and about the audiences to whom they speak. Programmes are the
highly determinate end products of broadcasting; they are the point
of exchange between the producing institution and society. Judgements
of the adequacy or otherwise of broadcasting's efforts are always, and
rightly, based on them. So it was through the control of policy in re
lation to all aspects of programme output that the task of securing
acceptance and recognition of the claims and stalus of broadcasting was
performed.
The implementation of a coherent, corporate programme policy
began in the days of the company, but was greatly accelerated there
after. It required the establishment of more authoritative styles and
modes of address in tlle announcing and presentation of programmes;
the pursuit of social and cultural prestige in the fields of music and
talks especially; the arbitration of the claims of different taste publics
in a single national channel; the trinuning of the wayward tendencies
of individual programme makers or departments; the moulding of each
area of output into the bearer of an articulate set of intentions and pre
scriptions, consonant with the ongoing work of other areas, collectively
working together to produce, in a complex unity, the corporate ethos
of public service broadcasting in the national interest.
To these ends Reith, in the early thirties, undertook the thorough
reorganisation of the running o f the BBe. The intention and effects of
the changes he introduced were to remove control over programme
decisions from the programme makers, and to deliver it into the hands
of a smaU, elite nucleus of senior administrators and planners who now,
in consultation with Reith or on their own initiative. determined the
overall policy objectives of the BBC. By the mid-thirties the control of
programming had slipped from the level of production to the newly
installed level of administration. This was not achieved then, or ever
after, simply and smoothly. To bring production in line new personnel
were brought in from outside to establish orthodoxy; departments were
split up, regrouped or dismantled; 'progressives' were eased out of pro
171
1939,
London) floated the idea of a topical series on the lines of the American
March of Time
major poUtical events of the time would be out of court, but still felt
this left a vast field of non-controversial issues which could be worked
up into a regular features series. 'If we can prove to the authorities that
we can tap a new source of topical features, without running them into
a lot of trouble, we can go a long way to filling one of the Corporation's
biggest gaps - that is, topicality' (Gilliam to Midland Region Director,
I March 1939). A them/us mentality, producers trying to steer their
way round the authorities by adapting their ideas to what 'they' might
accept, had become a reflex way of thinking.
The play of all these forces, upon and within broadcasting, comes to
bear on the level of production. They are the real, material determinants
that constrain and shape what is finally delivered to audiences. A full
and detailed examination of these processes at work in all major areas
of programmes cannot here be attempted. Three brief sketches of some
of the work of the Talks, News and Variety departments must serve to
give substance to the bones of these arguments.
172
173
this new freedom might be revoked if it was not discharged with due
responsibility. The lirting of this ban brought the Talks Department
now devolved the delicate task of finding new ways and means for the
issues. It is not surprising that it dipped its toes into the chilly waters
of controversy gingerly at first.
It would begin by the gradual and experimental introduction of
political and economic controversy on clearly defined occasions with
adequate safeguards for impartiality and equality of treatment. Religion
would still remain, by Reith's fiat, outside the pale of strife. Apart from
straight talks or lectures by individual speakers two other methods of
handling controversy were favoured. The first method was to hold
debates n
i which the topics should be carefully worded so there would
be some inherent equality in the contending opinions. The debaters
should be well matched and balanced. The other method was 'the dis.
cussion', defined as 'challenging and opposing points of view expounded
major reshuffie took place in the BBC which finnly installed a new hier
archy of administrators and planners in charge of programme planning
would not dominate the activities of the talks department. For the most
part it would continue to graze in safer pastures, 'to interpret the vast
field of n
i terests and knowledge which is happily beyond the frontiers
effcts o the receion bit deeper the department took the plunge.
Major senes on housmg, unemployment, trade unions, modern industry
(from the employee's point of view) and 'the condition of England'
question addressed themselves to the urgent problems of the day. Under
the direction of Hilda Matheson (1 9273 1 ) and Charles Siepmann
(19325) the talks department shared a common commitment to radio
as a new social form of communication, and a common interest in
developing new and effective means of communication via the spoken
word. These talks series introduced new and direct methods of social
reportage: eye.witness, firsthand accounts by RBC staff 'observers' of
slum conditions in Glasgow, Tyneside and the East End; the unem.
ployed themselves at the microphone to describe what it was like living
on the dole. Through such programmes radio now began to enter into
appro.
life, becoming material evidence
l
the very fabric of poitical
_
and policy, At the same time the talks department was dismantled and
key members of staff were 'promoted' to posts which took them a very
long way from Broadcasting House (New York, India or Manchester).
i the year the BBC was compelled by the Cabinet and the Foreign
Later n
Office, against the unanimous will of the Board of Governors and the
General Advisory Committee, to cancel a major talks series,
The Citizen
and a Communist (Harry Pollitt) amongst its speakers. The BBC was
forbidden to make it known publicly that the Cabinet had exercised its
power in this case. It must appear as a voluntary decision, 'freely' taken
i Europe (cL
by the BBC in the light of the general political climate n
Briggs, 1979,pp. 198201).
Hilda Matheson, who had resigned from the BBC a few years earlier
in an atmosphere of intrigue and bitterness, described the dismembering
of the Talks Department as 'a dispersal and disintegration unparalleled
in any other department . . . which has not been without consequent
loss to the common body of experience, techniques and tradition'. In
the autumn of 1935, she saw signs already of 'a widespread arrested
development' (cL Matheson. 1935, pp. 5 1 214). For the next few years
the department, confused and demoralised and lacking any decisive
leadership, contented itself with safer, less controversial subjects. In the
174
later thirties the most striking things about the work of talks (and fea.
tures) in London is an absence
the lack of any programmes dealing
ment was running a major series called TIle Ways ofPeace. By the time
Munich arrived (September/October 1938) there was widespread dismay
175
His
being, the Post Office, the press barons and the news agencies had fixed
Sporting news. Though the bulk of the material used in the bulletins
it between them that radio would not develop its own news service in
and news talks were now regular features in these years (for a useful
only to deliver news bulletins written and supplied, for a nat annual
and struggle behind the scenes with press interests and the state over the
nature and scope of the BBC's news service. One concession made by
market for evening newspapers. Even under such severe restraints the
the charter in 1927 had been the recognition in principle of the BBC's
BBC was able by little and litUe to impose something of its own ideas
the
It. was the General Strike of 1926 which showed everyone
public, the government, the opposition, the labour movement as well
risis. The BC learnt many lessons from the strike, which had a lasting
Impact on Its subsequent relations with, and attitudes towards' the
The spearhead of this quite new trend was the Empire Marketing Board
under Stephen Tallents (appointed as the BBC's first Public Relations
Officer in 1935), though the Foreign Office had long maintained close
links with the foreign correspondents of the serious press. By the early
1930s all major state departments had installed Publicity and Press
Officers to release information, to organise publicity for departmental
campaigns and to promote, via formal and informal channels, the policy
176
objectives of the department (cL PEP Report, 1938). The BBC worked
hard and long to establish and maintain routine and continuous links
with state departments, the Prime Minister's office and other authorities
(e.g. the GLC, Scotland Yard) on the same footing as the press. Since
departmental press releases were usually given in the late afternoon the
BBC was advantageously placed to nip in and pick the plums for its
evening bulletins ahead of the morning press. But the agencies retaliated
by slapping embargoes on such releases, labelling them 'not for Broad
casting' before the foUowing day. Across the whole of the thirties there
were continuing efforts by the BBC to negotiate with agencies and the
government an agreed code of practice for the classification of official
publicity and news releases.
It made little headway. The government's attitudes to radio news
had been fonned in the General Strike. It saw it as, particularly in
moments of crisis, a malleable instrument for the advancement of its
own purposes. There is little doubt that in many instances the organs
of government and the state, along with other authorities and powers
that be, successfully 'used' the bulletins in various ways: to promote
their own campaigns and projects, to 'correct' errors in press stories,
and in critical moments (such as 1931) to paper over the cracks in the
social structure (and official policies) by appealing for calm and national
unity. The RBC was guileless in allowing itself to be so used in the early
thirties. It hoped, by currying favour with the authorities, to steal a
mrch on the agencies and newspapers. It saw itself as in partnership
With the state and civil authorities in upholding the national interest
and maintaining 'the settled community'.
Such complaisance must be understood, in part, as symptomatic of
the political lUIivete, compounded by the absence of any joumaUstic
experience, of the handful of people working in news. They were grate
ful for any crumbs the state supplied, and petulant when it turned to
feed the press instead. For if in moments of crisis the state favoured the
more reliable medium of radio, in normal times it prudently favoured
the senior news medium which it had wooed, cajoled or threatened for
centuries. Newspapers were much better placed to kick up a public
fuss than the BBC. The Corporation had yet to grasp the extent of the
state's power over it, or that it might be being used by the state for pur.
poses and policies that did not square with its own concept of service to
the nation.
The loss of innocence came a few years later, over the government's
appeasement policy. From mid1937 the BBC's senior management had
been making contingency plans for broadcasting in wartime based on
the assumption that a European war was imminent and inevitable. By
the summer of 1938 these plans, down to the fine details of wartime
salaries, had been accepted by the Cabinet and ratified and agreed by
177
the BBC's management boards. Yet all this time its public stance had
been to acquiesce in Chamberlain's foreign policy and to promote the
illusion that peace might still be preserved.
The Munich crisis brought this contradiction to a head. For the
News Department it finally revealed the complete inadequacy of agency
coverage of foreign affairs. The serious press, through its special corres
pondents, had provided a far fuller and more authoritativ covcrage of
the crisis. From this moment News resolved to develop Its own staff
correspondents; in the meantime, it despatched what resources it had
(Murray, Dimbleby and the recording van) to Czechoslovakia for upto
the.minute reports on the aftennath of Munich. At the same time its
resolve was stiffened to keep on plugging away at the truth, no matter
how unpleasant. Night after night, in early 1939, the bulletins contained
recorded extracts of the live speeches by Hitler and the Nazi leadership
which made plain their bellicose intentions and the imminence of a
European conflict. This provoked an extraordinary backlash in the Tory
press. For the whole of February 1939 the letter columns of The Times
were filled with an avalanche of angry letters attacking the tenor of
radio news: scaremongering, sensationalism, a leftwing bias against
Fascist countries (old charges of a similar nature against news coverage
of the Spanish Civil War were frequently dug up), subverting the good
efforts of the government to establish friendly relations with Germany
and Italy - such were the accusations in a babble of voices as the chorus
of protest swelled and became ever more shrill. Other newspapers joined
in with the Daily Mail as usual squealing loudest. In March the press
produced a spate of 'BBC Suicides', of people alleged to have killed
themselves in a fit of depression after hearing the news on radio. No
similar instances of press suicides were reported.
After the General Strike Reith had tried to rationalise the role of
radio in the matter by arguing that 'since the BBC was a national institu
tion, and since the Government in the crisis was acting for the people
. . . the BBC was for the Government in the crisis too'. Munich was the
first major crisis (Suez was another) which put to the test that syllogism
as a definitive precedent for the role of the BBC in a national crisis. In
this case the BBC came to see that the government, in spite of its own
claims, was manifestly not acting in the national interest. Having grasped
that nettle, the BBC saw its final responsibility as resting with and to the
audience, not the state. It made strenuous efforts in those final months
before war to alert the public to the true implications of Munich by
trying to bring the opponents of appeasemcnt (Eden and Churchill
above all) to the microphone. It was prevented from so doing by the
Conservative Chief Whip, by Chamberlain's Office and by the short
sighted opportunism of the labour Party. It strove to produce talks
series on home and civil defence to prepare the public for the outbreak
178
179
relays from their stages. Even when such relays were permitted, they
listenin g public, the BBC was cast in the role of Cassandra - a sooth
sayer of hateful and unpalatable truths which were doomed to go un
heeded.
(BBC Handbook,
reflected the fact that there had indeed been public demands for an
increase in the BBC's proviSion of entertainment. Newspapers had con
ducted somewhat unreliable poUs which showed that variety and dance
bands were among the most popular programmes, yet they made up a
small proportion of total output. But the scarcity of light entertainment
could not be ascribed entirely to the imposition of Reithian standards.
It is true that limitations were placed on the amount of dance music
broadcast. This could be produced cheaply; in 1934 it accounted for
9.5 per cent of the output of all stations but absorbed only 5.8 percent
of programme costs. (By way of comparison, serious music made up
14.4 per cent of output but costs amounted to nearly 30 per cent of
There was a need for new blood. Maschwitz recognised that the BBC
had come to depend too much upon a small group of radio 'regulars'.
the programme budget.) Variety, on the other hand, was the most ex
Some , like the dance band leaders Henry Hall and Jack Payne, had
time devoted to vaudeville, variety, revue and musical comedy was 4.8
pected that many of the comedians who had made their reputation in
per cent, but the proportion of cost was 15.3 per cent. In spite of this
grammes. The true potential of radio comedy was not realised until the
out on the occasional star perfonner but admitted that the bulk of their
regular comedy series, with its stock characters and imaginary settings,
from successful writers who could command far higher fees working in
mOl or theatre than the BBC was prepared to pay. Overworked stafT
which escaped from the stage conventions of the variety theatre and
wrilers were depended upon for much of the original material in shows.
There were further limitations. Many lop variety stars could nol
Hall,
old days, the music hall stars could rely on a limited number of routines
t last them for almost a lifetime. They toured the prOvinces giving one
place were such that their material always seemed fresh. Radio could
mghl perfonnances, and the gaps between their appearances in any one
not tolerate such a crop rotation of variety acts. Then there were the
rcurring disagreements with Ihe leading theatrical agencies, Moss Em
sistent element in this show was the opening announcement and the
180
SeTllng
i the Nation
181
spiration, America continued to supply the models for new shows. The
83).
183
earlier the BBC introduced the first variety series which rested on a
sideration was given to the pOint of view of 'the man in the street' (cf.
Cardiff,
Dance band music, the cinema organ, musical reviews and operettas
were not classified as music and were produced by the Variety Depart
mystery,
There were two aspects to musical policy : to improve popular taste, and
to present systematically to listeners the best music with the highest
concerned with the latter; programme planners and policy makers with
Arthur Askey, and his playmate Richard Murdoch. Askey and Murdoch
the fonner. The department showed increasing distaste for the notion
began to script their own material and soon evolved a method of pro
duction that could not have been applied outside radio. With a lavish
the mythical flat above Broadcasting House, complete with their pets,
(Le. reforming public taste) upon the department, which focused on the
Lewis the goat and the pigeons, Basil and Lucy. When the tenants
hoovered the floor, the entire BBC Variety Orchestra, practising in the
Mozart theme might lead the mUSically illiterate to a taste for Mozart.
mensely popular and set the pattern for a whole tradition of British
But the Music Department declared that jazzed classics were merely
radio comedy.
proof of the unbridgeable gulf between serious and popular music, and
Entertainment did not rank high on the scale of pre-war BBC values.
of the day to speak at the microphone. They trooped into the studios to
Chesterton . . . all the great men of the day. There were very few women.
They did not have, it was felt, the right microphone voice. TIle most
ties, though there is no evidence for the trutll of any of these claims.
By
had been severely reduced, and it took considerable pressure from the
1936 greater efforts were being made to make talks less boring for
1981).
Regional radio took some time to establish its presence, but by the
midthirties it was showing signs of vigorous life. At its worst provincial
keenly aware of the stratified nature of the audience, and greater con.
different relationship with its audiences, more intimate and equal than
playing quaint local customs, dialect, etc. At its best it set up a quite
184
185
the National Programme. Since its major task was the renection of the
region it served, there was a much more conscious effort to get the
microphone out of the studio and into reaJlife ; and some of the major
Region, which had the largest regionaJ audience of aU. Under the leader
regional taient. But there is more than that. For it is also the business
of the regions to express the everyday life of the region, its daily
they were made aspects of their own life and experience. in this respect
people
the work of D.G. Bridson and Olive Shapley was outstanding. In pro
grammes like
found new ways of letting working people express their own opinions
Conclus.ions
accepted by the end of the thirties. Outwardly its policies, channels and
way of life. Inwardly there were forces at work to undermine the solid
ways that London could not match in the late thirties. Nor was topic
its audiences, and of the audiences to the BBC, were becoming more
duced in the regions were more socially engaged and to the point than
the other side of the microphone the listener must recognise that a
definite obligation rests on him to choose inteUigently from the pro
of Talks, was sent to tour the regions and write a report. He was much
When the activities of the regions are compared with those of London
in the late thirties one has a strong impression of caution and stined
nOise, was frowned on. '1bink OfyOUT favourite occupation. Don't you
like a change sometimes? Give the wireless a rest now and then.'
The: regions were less amenable to the dead hand of policy control. They
were more in touch with their audiences, and more in sympathy with
them, than London. Since there were only about a dozen staff in each
regional station working relations were much more informal, and indi
maintain a smooth flow from one item to the next. Instead the spaces
viduals had much greater freedom to decide on the work they wanted
save for the tick of a studio clock, to allow people to switch off rather
critic for The Listener in 1939 she declared in her last article:
Let me before I die give one last shout about the importance of
regional broadcasting. It is, I assure you, worth shouting about. Its
effect on English life is only just beginning to be felt and is already
ing was remote and alien from the present day art of television schedul
ing designed to capture and maintain large audiences in prime time (cf.
Wheldon, 1972). CentraJ to the art of programme building was the
186
Servn
i g the Nation
attempt to cater for all tastes, minority and majority, over a period of
lime (a month was the period sometimes quoted). The balance was not
maintained in the daily or weekly bill of fare. One need not expect to
Hnd variety or light entertainment on offer every night. Fixed schedul
ing (Le. placing programmes at the same time on the same day from
week to week) was, with one or two exceptions, avoided. It was not
easy to keep track of a talks series or drama serial, for their time and
place varied quite markedly from one week to the next. Through such
means the BBC aimed to keep the audience awake, to stop it falling
into idle habits or taking the output on offer for granted. The mono
poly was essential for this ideal. Through it the BBC was not obliged to
compete for audiences, but was able to presume them.
But as lime wenl by this set of expectations vested in the audience
began to wear thin. The drift to Luxembourg, especially on Sundays,
of a large portion of the working-class audience Signalled the dubious
success of the project in that quarter at least. It is unlikely, though, that
any large part of the audience ever behaved itself as ideally it was sup
posed to do. Against the wishes of the BBC the circumstantial evidence
suggests that for most people most of the time, irrespective of class or
education, radio was treated as no more than a domestic utility for
relaxation and entertainment - a convenience, a commodity, a cheerful
noise in the background - which occasionally in moments of national
crisis, mourning, celebration or sport became compulsory listening for
the whole country_
The signs of creeping doubt begin to appear in the shift to lighter
fare in the late thirties. listener Research, established in 1936 in part
under pressure from programme makers who wanted real information
about what the audience thought of their products, confirmed the in
creasing inroads made by European commercial radio stations. There
was an increasingly jaundiced attitude to the whole idea of 'coaxing
Caliban' (Le. trying to raise the level of cultural appreciation in the
majority audience) in departments such as Drama or Music. TIle separa
tion out of 'serious' and 'popular' styles of presentation and production
implicitly accepted the need to find fonnats that were suitable for and
acceptable to different publics with different levels of taste and educa
tion. The beginnings of social and cultural 'streaming' were present
before the war. Regional broadcasting again suggested a different rela
tionship between a programme service and its audience. At Otis time
there developed a routinisation of programme schedules, an increasing
number of fixed slots in the week, and a growth of series and serials and
of continuity programming. These processes, begun in the late thirties,
were greatly accelerated during the Second World War.
The war scuttled Ule hopes and values of the Reitllian era by irrevers
ibly changing the channel structures, programme services and audience
"
187
defUlitions of the BBC's radio service. When war was declared in Sept
ember 1939 the Regional Programme was immediately closed down,
and the National Programme became the Home Service (to distinguish
it from Overseas Programmes). Early in 1940 the Forces Programme
was launched for the British Expeditionary Force in France. It reversed
at a stroke all the principles of pre-war radio. It was designed as an
entertainment service to please the troops, to give them what they
wanted to hear - dance music, sport and variety. After Dunkirk it
became an alternative 'light' programme to the Home Service. It im
mediately established itself as the majority channel, winning about 70
per cent of the listening public.
At first these changes were seen, in the BBC, as temporary measures,
expedient necessities of the moment, to maintain the nation's morale .
But just as the multiple needs and imperatives of a tolal war compeUed
the British state to pay far greater attention to public opinion and the
collective needs of the people, so too broadcasting found itself adjust
ing to popular demand_ The BBC no longer sought to lead and reform
public taste; it now tried to match or to anticipate it. These shifts to
wards more popular radio were accomplished with enthusiasm in some
quarters and with reluctant distaste in others_ But they were, in the
end, unstoppable.
In 1945 the landslide victory ofthe Labour Party showed the strength
of the collective will that there should be no going back to the economic
and social conditions of 1 939. No more could radio hope to return to
its pre-war ways. With more than a touch of weary resignation the post
war radio service had been redesigned as a three-channel service: the
Ught, the Home and Third Programmes, each corresponding to low.,
middle- and high-brow tastes. Gone was the effort to cater for all these
publics in a single channel. This social and cultural streaming marked
the end of the attempt to impose a single set of standards and tastes
upon the whole of the listening public. Reith hin."self, by now a rather
sad and embittered man, was not deceived:
TIle Third Programme, positively and negatively is objectionable_ It
is a waste of a precious wavelength; much of its maHer is too limited
n
i appeal; the rest should have a wider audience. Wilen overall pro
gramme policy and control was abandoned [our emphasis) , the Third
Programme was introduced as a sop to moral conscience, a sort of
safety valve (Stuart, 1975, p. 474: cf. pp. 462-82).
The ideal of public service broadcasting he had fostered, and the means
he had created for its achievement, had been blown away by the winds
of wartime change.
188
has come from the BBC Written Archive, Caversham, Reading. Since
this is a general article, detailed references to these sources have not
been given.
References
- (1965) The Golden Age of Wireless, The History of Broadcasting in the United
Kingdom, vol. 2, Oxford University Press
- ( J 979) Governing the OC, BBC
Cardirf, D. (1 980) 'TIle Serious and the Popular: Aspects of the Evolution of
Style in the Radio Talk, 1928-1939', Medla, Culture and Society, 2 (1)
Dimbleby, J. (1975) Richard Dimbleby, Hodder and Stough ton
Jennings, H., and Gill, W. (1939) Broadcasting in Everyday Life, BBC
Ma theson. H. (1933) OrotldCQsting. Thornton Butterworth
- (1935) 'The Record of the nBC', PolitiCQI Quarterly, 6 (4), 506-18
PEP Report ( 1938) Report on the British Pren, Political and Economic Planning,
London
Reith, J. (1924) Broadctlst over Oritain, Werner Laurie
Scannell, P. ( 1980) 'Broadcasting and the Politics of Unemployment, 1930-1935',
Mcdill, Culture and Society, 2 (I)
- (1981) 'Musical Chairs: a Policy for Broadcast Music',Media, Culture and
Society, ] (3)
n (1964) HMSO
Soundand Television SUllfs in Britai
Stuart, C. (ed.) (1975) The Reith Diluies. Collins
WedeU, E. (1968) OroadctlltinltlndI'Ilblic Policy, Michael Joseph
Wheldon, H. (1972) The Effects ofCompetih'on, BOC
PART TWO
INTRODUCTION
ilC' lifi
191
\
.
192 Introduction
193
Introduction
, ..
girls' and women s mags' .
.
Paul Willis's more descriptive account of 'The Motor-bt
ke and Motor
bike Culture' attempts to decipher the symbolic meanings which infonn
the activities centring on motor-bike clubs. Clothes, personal appearance , hair-style, the rejection of goggles, gloves and helmets are seen as
.
conscious expressions of the basic 'cultu' meag:
the assrtLon r
Physical power in a world of direct phYSical expenence. ACCidents, If
ot sought are prized like victories. Engine noise is exaggerated and
ctiyely en oyed, whether the machine is stationary or i use. Proba?le
death from a motor-bike accident is felt to be appropnate, memonal
ised in rituals and motor-bike folklore. The mace itself, to the exter
nal and ignorant observer the product of a speCifically modern techo
logical industrialism, had been incorporated into a set of exprelve
.
practices, which are 'increasingly the [onn of cultural life, everyday life ,
for underprivileged groups'.
The next extract, 'Confessions, Concoctions and Conceptions' by
Allison James, also draws on structuralism, but in its anthropological
version. The subject differs from the others in addressing less a fonn of
popular culture than a widespread, though littie-<iiscussed, social Hac
tice: children's sweets. Noting the unusual use of the North-East dialec
tal term 'kets' for such sweets, whose normal meaning is 'rubbish',
"
Dick Hebdige
1 935-1962
Dick Hebdige
194
195
197
Dick Hebdige
ss?, sun
His strongest tastes were negative. He abhorred plastics, Pi
s own
bathing and jazz - everything in fact that had happened m hi
198
199
Dick Hebdige
The critical space in which this reaction took place had already been
opened up by the literary tradition of dissent and polemic which
Raymond Williams describes in Culture and Society (1961). Though
different political perspectives coexist within that tradition, the
'levelling down process' associated with 'mass culture' pro\ided a
radical populist like George OrweU, a self-<:onfessed elitist such as T.S.
Eliot and a social democrat like Richard Hoggart with common cause
for concern.
Cultural if not political conservatism drew together writers who were
prepared to take opposing sides on issues which at the time were more
openly contentious (eg the role of education in the State). Though
there was never any agreement as to what exactly should be preserved
from the pre-War world, there was never any doubt amongst these
writers that clearly something should. Whereas Eliot and F.R. Leavis
were pledged to defend the immutable values of minority culture
against the vulgar inroads of the popular arts, to defend in Matthew
Arnold's tenns 'culture' against 'anarchy', Orwell and Hoggart were
interested in preserving the 'texture' of working class life against the
bland allure of post War affiuence - television, high wages and con
sumerism. The blanket hostility with which the former set of writers
greeted the advent of mass culture requires little explanation or critique.
It has become part of the 'commonsense' of cultural studies.
However, the resistance to cultural innovation offered by Hoggart
and Orwell was more ambivalent and uncertain. Both these writers
castigate the emerging 'consumer culture' on roughly the same grounds.
They both equate the classless tone of the glossy advertisements with
the erosion paradoxically of meaningful choice.
Both Orwell and Hoggart use the image of the holiday camp as a
paradigm for working-class life after the War. Orwell imagines a modern
design for Coleridge's Kubla Khan consisting of air-<:onditioned caverns
turned into a series of tea-grottoes in the moorish, Caucasian and
Hawaiian styles. The sacred river would be dammed up to make an arti
fically wanned bathing pool and, playing in the background there
would be the constant pulse of muzak 'to prevent the onset of that
dreaded thing thought' (Orwell, 1979).
In the same way, to achieve the same effects, Hoggart sets one of his
parodies of the cheap romantic fiction of the 50s in a place called the
Kosy Holiday Kamp complete with 'three dance halls, two sun.bathing
parades and lots of milk bars' (Hoggart, 1958) in which the imaginary
female narrator drools over a 'hunk of luscious manhood' who com
bines the dubious appeal of 'Marlon Brando and Humph. Bogart' (ibid).
Strangely enough, then, despite the ideological gulf(s) which separate
these two writers from a man like Evelyn Waugh, there are common
themes and images linking what they all wrote on developments in the
field of popular culture in the post war years. When Waugh saw a
decline and fall, a flattening out of social and aesthetic criteria, Hoggart
and Orwell see the substitution of an 'authentic', 'vigorous' working
class conununity by the idea of a community; the replacement of 'real'
values by what Hoggart at his most evocative calls a 'shiny barbarism'
'. . . the ceaseless exploitation of a hollow brightness' . . . 'a spiritual
dry-rot' . . . a 'Candy Floss World' (ibid.).
TIlOugh they spoke from quite different positions, these three
writers share a language which is historically determined and determin
ing. They are loosely linked in this particular context through a largely
unacknowledged because largely unconscious ( . . .1 consensus of taste
even if that consensus is organised around a list of negatives - i.e.
round those things that they do not like.
Dick Hebdige
201
rationing:
203
Dick Hebdige
Dick Hebdige
There's .a kind of atmosphere about these places (the new milk bars).
.
Everytg shck and shiny and steamlined: mirrors, enamel and
chromIUm plate whichever direction you look in. Everything spent
n the decorations and nothing on the food. No real food at all. Just
lists of stuff with American names, sort of phantom stuff that you
try to tease out some of the meanings encoded into streamlined arte
facts at the design an production stages. It thus becomes possible to
I?oren cI.tes the sub issin as early as 1867 of a patent for a 'stream
lined tram,). To begm With the smooth cigar shapes to which the word
'streamlining' referred were associated exclusively with aviation tech
facil
ol?gy where it was argued that they served a specific function
Itatmg speed maximalising air flow etc. However these visual motifs
were by the eady 30s being carried over into American design . (The
_
.
so ?n constitutd in this new context a popular,
?eslgns.) S.treamimmg
eye catchmg vocabulary
deSigns by Walter Gropius for Ule German Adler Company. (For ex.
ample. the 1930 Adler Cabriolet is often quoted in books on design
.
theory as the apotJleosis of 'tasteful' car design )
By the nd of the decade streamlining was beginning to be applied
.
to commodlhes totally outside the transport field in which it had found
-=-----
--
205
1940 Harold van Doren could write:
1979)
The ensuing controversy surrounding these allegedly 'improper' applica
tions of streamlining lasted for more than two decades and [ . .J it still
.
remains
in
'serious' and the 'popular', between 'good' and 'bad' taste, came to be
articulated in a particular discursive field between the years 1935-55 ,
l ar distinctions produced in
to examine how far they paralleled simi
other areas at more or less the same time and to relate these develop.
ments back to changes in the modes of industrial production, distribu
In
"'This was not necessarily the case elsewhere in Europe: modern movement princi.
pies were appropriated at different times in Russia for communism' in italy and
Gennany for fascism.
Dick fJebdige
207
209
Dick Hebdige
on the
whl<h h' Justified by claiming that it conferred 'visible prestige'
a u"ous
d' and 'osten t
car owner. In the furore which these 'unwarrante
of the
features caused in European design circles many f the themes .
the
With
but
recapitulated
wer
e
30s
the
of
debate
streamlining
original
.
economy,
consumer
a
to
production
a
from
years
War
post
the
in
shift
fore
the issue of impending 'Americanisation' was far more clearly
grounded:
are far removed from their characteristic sources - negro muSIc and
aero-dynamics and fmally both are
the star-system (Faulkner, 1976).
highly
h!
taUfms' (ibid.).
. .
Nonetheless by this time (as Banham's confidently satinc vOice
.
th and artlculacy :
here indicates) the opposition was growing in stren
.
m (8aham ,,:,as
the modernist consensus was being attacked from wtth
DeSl
/ndustnal
journal
York
New
The
Pevsner).
of
student
a former
began to carry arch and generally appreciative reviews of new DetrOIt
products and there were attempts on the part of certain ction of
the New York intelligentsia as early as 1951 to have Earl s creauons
reassessed as art in inverted commas. { . . .J In London the emergence
of a similarly ironic sensibility - a sensibility which was eventuy
to produce both 'Pop Art' and Tom Wolfe's New Journalism - was g
nalled in the formation of the Independent Group and the mountmg
1956
:hibition
Dick Hebdige
2 11
212
is conditioned
ntil h e early to mid 60s. But evenhere amongst the young, consump
tion ntuals, far from being classless, continued to take place within a
culture marply divided precisely round the class-related questions of
consumption where it wasn't organised
ufe which in
213
Dick Hebdige
or
Evelyn Waugh
fLIms,
[.
Picture Post
at the
[.
coming a teddy boy was not something which could be undert ken
lightly. Fa fro being a casual response to 'easy money', the extrava
gant sartonal dISplay of the ted required careful financial planning and
was remarkably self-conscious - a going against the grain, as it were, of a
-In 191 the Naional Board of Prices and Incomes reported that the distribution
of ean:un
.
n:mamcd more or less the same as in 1886: material hardship may
have du
m
ru
s
hed but relative deprivation still persisted.
The teds, after all, were drawn more or less exclusively from the 'sub
.1
cafes and danc halls. And the most conspicuous evidence of change
the emergence m the early 50s of flamboyant subcultures like the teddy
[.
Picture Post
in
and productive forces was registered at the level of form in the appear
ance of new recorded musica1 genres (rock 'n' roll,
[.
of change
and
converted into
[ . . .J
We have seen how streamlining constituted the explicit declaration
in form of technological innovations (e,g. stamping and pressing tech-
industrial
in
215
Dick Hebdige
necessarily
entailed the
1971).
in
rock 'n' roll blaring from a streamlined speaker cabinet, the cultural
conservatives of 1935 or 1965, irrespective of their overt political
affiliations were right to perceive what Benjamin described as 'the
destructive, cathartic aspect, that is, the liquidation of the traditional
value of the cultural heritage' (1977). They were right to perceive that
what was at stake was a future - Lheir future.
Conclusions
It would, finally, be misleading to end a discussion of some of the con
ceptions of 'popular taste' wh.ich prevailed from
1935
to
1962 without
composition
bars, hair styles and clothes). There can be no doubt that America,
tate:
1977).
which are readily available lend to faU outside the period covered by
this paper (e.g. in
screen time was taken up with American rums, and that American
made programmes accounted for more than
Writing in the same spirit at more or less the same time, Gramsci pro
transmission time
in
leading
advertising
Bigsby,
1975).
i
of
production technology ('Fordism') would lead to the ntensification
of the State into every aspect of private and public life - to a subtler,
inevit
cal America', seems to suggest that the early fears about the homogeni.
Dick Hebdige
217
10
Qnd Europe,
FOOTBALL S I N C E T H E WAR
Chas Critcher
Source:
It
R. Johnson
chan!!J!s
where jobs were scarce. Thc clubs had grown up out of pride in
athleticism, in local importance . in corporate endeavour. The
(In his original essay, Chas Critcher discusses a nfth aspect of post-Waf soecer:
i cluded this owing to pressure
the impact of the media on the gamc. We have not n
on space
Eds.J
II
QJos Critcher
221
They ask two freedoms: freedom for a player to negotiate his own
contract of employment, and freedom to negotiate his own wages
with his employer. These are freedoms which are basic , unarguable ,
and the right of every working man in Britain.)
The second feature is the characteristic attitude adopted by the League,
seeing absolute control over players as the only bulwark against the
rampant greed of the players and the tyranny of the transfer market. In
lIle event some of their worst fears were proved justified, in so far as
higher wages did contribute to the ever-widening gap between rich and
poor clubs. But this was due at least as much to a spiralling transfer
market, about which the League has done precisely nothing. In any
case the massive wage differentials opened up by abolition were in part
attribulable to the fonn and intensity of League opposition which
ruled out the possibility of negotiating some alternative fonn f wage
control which would have benefited the average as well as the excep
tional professional footballer.
Thirdly, and less often noted, are the implications of cconomic
developments for the cultural situation of the player. The professional
footballer was traditionally a kind ofworkingdass folk hero and knew
himself to be such. He came from, and only moved margin:illy out of,
the same economic and cultural background as those who paid to watch
him. In such a context, a dramatic change in the economic situation of
the player was bound to have severe repercussions on the cultural
Significance of his role as hero. Put simply, the effect of these changes
was that 'for some of the star perfonners in football the "new deal"
has meant an everyday life transfonned from the kind led by the
,
previous generation .4
The emphasis here must be on 'everyday life'. It was nOI just a ques
tion of footba1lers having gained the right to more money and more
bargaining power in relation to their employing club. What became
gradually clear was that the 'new deal' had fractured the set of social
and cultural relationships by which the player's identity had previously
been structured. His relationships with management were strained by
the constant demands for perfonnance returns on the investment in
him; his attitudes towards fellow players became more neurotically
competitive and the search for a common footballing code found only
a uneasy justification of cynicism in the ethos of 'professionalism';
hIS relationship with the spectators, increasingly mediated by height
ened expectations of the successful and the spectacular, came more and
more to resemble that of the highly acclaimed entertainer required to
produce the 'goods' for public consumption.
If the economic emancipation of the professional footballer was
differentiated in distribution and impact, so were its effects on the
Olas Critcher
223
C11as Critcher
style that was truly anonymous. This was partly due to the impression
of confonnity which the description 'incorporated' is eant to onvey:
.
he
t image of the small businessman is hardly laden wlh herOIc quali
ties. The development of tactics, too, had made playUlg styles more
rigid: over-collective, remorseless and functional, the new dem nds
were for the runner, the 'worker' who could fit into. a preconceIVe?
pattern. Alan Ball is a symptomatic player here: his total style IS
defmed by the new tactics:
225
...
The Supporter
What will be described here as the disaffection of the supporter from
his traditional relationshlp to professional football has taken three main
forms: firstly, a disinclination to continue following the local team
regardless of its achievement; secondly and relatedly, a preference for
armchair viewing of week.1y televised excerpts: thirdly, a symbolic
redefinition of the role of the supporter through the activities of ritual
ized aggression adopted by younger fans.
The first signal of the spectators' disaffection was the fall in total
annual attendance at league matches. By 1955 it was clear that the
great post-war boom in attendances was over. The peak had been
reached with the record total of41 ,250,000 in the 1948-9 season, after
which the figure decreased steadily to 34,OOOPOO in 19545 . By the
early 1960s the total figure had stabilized to around 28,oooPoo and
after a further peak in 1968 a new low was reached in 1971-2 with only
21,000,000, rather less than half of the 1948 figure. By the middle
1970s, however, a further stabilization had taken place at around
25pOO,OOO. The clubs outside the fust division have fared worst: in
1964 they accounted for 56 per cent of all attendances but len years
later they had only 48 per cenLII Such numbers are a barometer of
success or failure. The common response to declining attendances has
been to defUle football as in competition with other often more attrac
tive leisure opportunities. In 1961, Tile Times noted that the changing
social habits - 'H.P., the weekend family car, bingo and the rest' meant 'mediocrity is harder to sell now'. The conclusion was that foot
ball's falling tes reflected changcd class aspirations: 'Once football
was the opium of the masses. No longer. There is a greater awareness of
standards and comfort now. So perhaps the real answer at last is for a
complete spring clean:12 An opinion poll commissioncd by the Football
League in 1962 came to similar conclusions. Noting the main factors
for staying away as changed attitudes towards family and home, the
lack of comfort at grounds - and, in a minor key. defensive football
and players' lack of discipline - the report concluded that 'the arrest
of the fall in gates can be achieved only by making football matches
a.nd their surroundings more attractive than other leisure activitics .'13
The government-sponsored Chester Report of 1968 took a similar line.
a,aS Critcher
227
The fmancial deterioration has taken place during a period when the
general standard of play has reached a very high level. The explana
tion therefore lies not there but probably in the radical changes
which have taken place in the social pattern and in people's attitudes
and leisure activities. M
The message, then, was clear. Spectators were not disaffected from the
game as such, but from the facilities it offered and its inability to adopt
a more modern style of selfpresentation. [ . . .J
There are many potential objections to such comments wltich are
only the 10gicaJ extension of the remarks previously quoted. ( . . .J The
main point to note here is that the major response to real changes in
spectators' attitudes to football has not been to examine the cultural
changes in the Fflme and its immediate context. Rather it has been
to import into discussion of the spectator an image which comes not
out of a cultural concern but from the heart of conunercial activity:
the image of the consumer. Raymond Williams has noted the historical
development of tluee kinds of cultural relationshlp between an individ
ual or social group and social institutions: member, customer and
consumer.IS The first, however illusorily, thinks of himself as a member,
and may recognize an informal set of reciprocal duties and obligations
between himself and the institution. The customer, more detached, is
seeking satisfaction for specific wants: if they are not met over a certain
period of time, he may, somewhat reluctantly, take his patronage else
where. But the consumer has no loyalty or habit. He is informed of the
choices open to him, and when he wants something will make a rational
choice about where he will get the best bargain. Such choices are con
tinually made, and the logic of the market is that those who wish to sell
their products will compete with each other for his attention.
If this model is applied to the supporter, we may see how his
relationship to the main social institution of football, the club, has been
changing. Ian Taylor has convincingly suggested that the traditional
supporter was able to think positively about his relationship to the
club.16 He could feel that the club and its players belonged to him and
his fellow supporters. The players were 'available subcultural represen
tatives' conscious of their closeness, cultural and economic to their
'
supporters, who in tum fulfilled that role and provided him with cul
tural and economic support. Thus 'the rank and file supporter could
(however wrongly) see himself as being a member of a collective and
democratically structured enterprise'.
With the fall in attendances, it became apparent that this illusion
was no longer enough to maintain supporters' loyalty. It had to com
pete with other more powerful illusions. The response of those who
dominated the public discussion and practical administration of football
...
228
OIOS cntcher
: :
to improve the poverty of the ground facilities, these were more than
counterbalanced by the image, explicit or implicit, of the supporter
on which major policy decisions were based. The effects, Taylor has
argued, were devastating - football was subject to a process of profes.
sionalization:
Professionalization does not consist simply of entry into the transfer
market and the beginnings of large transfer fees. It is also he pross
whereby clubs began to accommodate themselves to theu changmg
role in a declining entertainments industry. Developmental rocesses
.
in the wider society were increasing the leisure opportunltles of an
.
increasingly differentiated workingdass. Football was competrn.g
for customers over and above football subculture. In one sense, thlS
g an e ape
une,
from responsibilities, the provision of a spectacle from tune to
_
'football hooliganism'. Not only is the phrase itself a label rather than
.
. .
istics
a descriptive or analytical category, but there are Virtually no stat
229
who are not? Finally, in terms of evidence, the media are an extremely
unreliable source, involved as they are not merely in reporting but in
what the 'hooligans" own self'perceptions can reveal about their rela
tionship to the game .
The Times
those
authorities who try to stamp this out have the full support not only
repertoire. lSI Even the more responsible journalists insisted that the
of containment and control; it also denies that such behaviour has any
rationale in tenns of the development of postwar football .
230
elias Critcher
teristic of the 1950s and 1960s - spiralling transfer fees, the economic
image of the supporter. Thus those who look to the game for the asser
tion of traditional values are left behind; they are a 'subcultural rump'.
With no former channels available to them to express their loyalty, and
231
viol ence among players and that amongst spectators, either as a simple
causal one (punch-up on the field equals punch-up on the terraces) or
in terms of players setting a 'bad example' for younger impressionable
players to follow_ The cOIUlection seems to me more subtle and more
indirect. The traditional player and Supporter inhabited a set of cul
tural defmitions of themselves and each other: what I propose to call
separate but related codes. Neither the laws of the game nor those of
the society governing behaviour on the terraces are sufficient to guaran
tee order. What there has to be in addition is a set of unwritten rules
informal access to club and players closed, they draw on what few
become like his father), but it is more fragile and tenuous. Within the
resources they have left. They evolve their own songs and chants, insti
the opposition, and extend the violent conflict of the field to the
terraces and beyond.
generate
ns.ru
and ideology of the game. They are not selective consumers but totally
in their situation
commitment,
uncontrolled
in
its
[ . . .J
The Club
1954 a
place in the national culture is lost, the game will lose as a business and
cen ury whn Iubs began to take gate money, pay players and regist er
.
.
as limited liabihty companIeS, these have been integral characteristics
worked themselves through in the postwar period and how such deve
[ . . .)
In
of the football club. The problem here is how these contradictions have
lopments affect the role of the game as working-class culture.
medium-size business.
Qws Critcher
233
What we have here are two very different and yet specific images of the
cultural role of the football club. The bigger clubs are to provide facili
. for an amorphous group of consumers and their families: squash
hes
corts, swimming ools and the rest. The smaller club is to encourage
vanous fonns of 'mvolvement': drinking at a club bar, listening to a
'blue' comic, selling a quota of tote tickets.
234
ChOJ Crilchel
directors and season ticket holders (and their friends) are served nrst.
He has been crammed into a small space with thousands of others to
an extent which has literally put life and limb at risk. Now all this is
to change: seats are provided, bars opened, car parks provided - all of
course at a price around three times the original. He has been changed
235
the field. Between the directors and the players stands the manager: it
is on his ability to produce a successful side that the annual accounts and the continuity of his job - depend. The end product of financial
instability is fear of failure.
The motives are far from altruistic. At their simplest, these are
terrace to seating may halve capacity but it will double revenue. Plush
enclosed boxes may be leased - at several thousand pounds a season to businesses who can entertain their own and other executives, whisky
in hand, to a spot of instant entertainment. Meanwhile those too
young, too poor, or too traditional to understand or appreciate these
improvements will be huddled together behind the goals.
The new consumer then receives more status but has no more power.
Further,
itself with the minions. That a typical third division crowd is, in tenns
of any other sport, a substantial gathering of people who are expressing,
through their attendance, support for a specific cultural institution the local football club - will rmd little purchase amongst those whose
latest investment - a footbalJer - will be worth more than all of a third
In 1953 a new queen was crowned, an Englishman was one of the rust
10 climb Everest, and Stanley Matthews at last won the Cup Winners'
But in the same year England were soundly thrashed 6-3 by Hungary at
Wembley. the first national side from the continent to beat England on
their home ground. To prove it was no fluke they handed out an even
more severe beating, 71, in the return some months later in Budapest.
to survive. They must become athletes, 1 00 per cent fit; they must
become gymnasts; they must make the ball a slave, answering every
command. and they must start thinking intelligently ahead of the
pass . . . We must reshape our whole outlook?S
( . . .1
As Percy Young has observed, this defeat reproduced within the game
236
Ows Oitcher
237
the midfield was the crucial arena: here the opposition must be
cramped for space, the ball won and distributed. This was too much for
twO men so another forward was withdrawn, generally a winger, regar
ded in the new system as a luxury since he depended on others for the
ball. This gave us 4-3-3 _ The pattern of innovation was abruptly
terminated because a 'system' was perceived to have won the World
Cup for England in 1966_ Ramsey experimented throughout the tourn
ament but the lesson learnt from his success was that exceptionaJ work
rate, team understanding and defenSive impenetrability could overcome
more skilful but less effective foreign sides. Without Ramsey's success
ful institutionalization, the subsequent tactical system of English foot
ball might not have become quite so rigid or have been so slavishly
reproduced through the league_ The essential was the attitude that (in
Arthur Hopcraft's words) 'success was overridingly important, that
positive method was indispensable, that attractiveness was inciden
tal' 27
.
In
elias Critcher
further to drive potential supporters away. The player too was affected
by the new tightness of the game ; ball players were a luxury, work-rate
the nonn, one small error could cost a game. In such an atmosphere it
was hardly surprising that brutality could become incorporated as a
tactic. The professional foul was born.
Its conception was at the international level. A loose framework of
laws appropriated by different cultural traditions was bound to bring
out differences of emphasis. Even so there seemed to be a virtual in
compatibility between English versions of acceptable physical contact
and those of south European and South American sides.
There are now two types of football in the world - the British style
and the Continental, latinAmerican counterpart. When brought
face to face - as in Milan recently - they tend on occasions to pro
vide an unhappy marriage. The foreigner, nourished on a game of
inflitration and sly intervention, with the minimum of physical
contact, regards the British attitude of hard tackling as quite brutal.
However fair and within the laws, this is considered overseas as
ugly, coarse and ruthless. The foreigner, for his part, employs subtle
body-checking, shielding of the ball and other tricks that rile the
Briton. So the bonfire is ready for burning, unhindered by crowds
and referees who penalize the British method because it is against
their natures and upbringing.u
239
Conclusion
The argument here has been that in the post-war period there have been
significant qualitative shifts in the game of football. as it is played on
the pitch, [. . .J organized through clubs, understood by the spectators,
and experienced by the professional footballer. [ . . .J
We may not have a language to describe adequately the continuing
transformation of football. [f there is a concept which can help to
distill the dominant tendencies it may be that of the spectacle. The
spectacle is an item produced for consumption. The essential relation
ship is that between producer and consumer. To this end the event
itself - in this case the ninetyinute match - is situated within
specific 'demands' universally held by the consumer for adequate car
p.arks, pre-match entertainment, organized response, and fed informa
lion. The consumer is provided for; his main activity is to decide
whether to come, but beyond thai he is expected to exert himself
little. As has been argued above, the provision of minimal comfort is
long overdue, and the loyalties of the existent footballing sub-culture
are not easily turned into the vagaries of consumerism. No Aston Villa
Supporter goes to Binningham City except to support the away team.
There is an example of a situation where the idea of the spectacle
has dominated football, and that is in the United States of America.
Adequate infonnation is hard to come by since the English press has
alternated between condescension and sycophancy in its reporting of
'"
Chas ()jtcher
241
(pelham, 1970).
Umberto Eco
11
In 1953
Royale.
London,
1966).
Ian Fleming published the first novel in the 007 series, Casino
Being a first work, it is subject to the then current literary
in fluence, and in the fifties, which had abandoned the traditional
detective whodunit trail in favour of violent action, it was impossible
to ignore the presence of Spillane.
To Spillane, Qsino Royale owes, beyond doubt, at least two
characteristic elements. First of all the girl Vesper Lynd, who arouses
the confident love of Bond, in the end is revealed as an enemy agent.
In a novel by Spillane the hero would have killed her. while in Aeming
the woman had the grace to commit suicide; but Bond's reaction when
it happens has the Spillane characteristic of transforming love into
hatred and tenderness to ferocity: 'She's dead, the bitch' Bond tele
phones to his London office, and so ends his romance.
In the second place Bond is obsessed by an image: that of a Japanese
expert in codes whom he had killed in cold blood on the thirty-sixth
floor of the R.C.A. Skyscraper at RockefeUer Centre - with a buUet from a window on the fortieth floor of the skyscraper opposite. By an
analogy that is surely not accidental, Mike Hammer seemed to be con
sistently haunted by the memory of a small Japanese he killed in the
jungle during the war, though with greater emotive participation (while
Bond's homicide, authorised officially by the doublezero, is more
ascetic and bureaucratic). The memory of the Japanese was the
beginning of the undoubted nervous disorder of Mike Hammer (of his
sadistic masochism, of his arguable impotence); the memory of his first
homicide could have been the origin of the neurosis of James Bond,
except that, within the ambit of Casino Royale , either the character or
his author solves the problem by non-therapeutic means: that is by
excluding the neurosis from the narrative. This decision was to influ
ence the structure of the following eleven novels by Fleming and pre
sumably forms the basis for their success.
After having helped to dispose of two Bulgarians who had tried to
get rid of him, after having suffered torture in the form of a cruel abuse
of his testicles, having been present at the elimination of Le Chiffre by
the action of a Soviet agent, having received from him a scar on the
242
hh
: :n
yourself with human beings, my dear James. They are easier to fight
for than principles. But don't let me down and become human yourself.
We cowd lose such a wonderful machine.'
With this lapidary phrase Fleming defmes the character of James
Bond for the novels to come. From CasillO Royale there remained the
scar on his cheek, the slightly cruel smile, the taste for good food,
together with a number of subsidiary characteristics minutely documen
ted in the course of this ftrst volume: but convinced by Mathis's words,
Bond was to abandon the treacherous life of moral meditation and of
psychological anger, with all the neurotic dangers that they entail. Bond
ceased to be a subject of psychiatry and remained at the most a physio
lOgical object (except for a return to the subject of the psyche in the
last, untypical novel in the series, The Man wilh Ihe Golden Gun), a
magnificent machine, as the author and the public, as weU as Mathis,
had wished. From that moment Bond did not meditate upon truth and
upon justice, upon life and death, except in rare moments of boredom,
usually in the bar of an airport, but always in the fonn of a casual day
dream, never allowing himself to be infected by doubt (at least in
novels - he did indulge in such intimate luxuries in the short stories).
From the psychological point of view a conversion has taken place
qUite suddenly, on the base of four conventional phrases pronounced
by Mathis, but the conversion was not really justified on a psychologi
cal level. In the last pages of CasillO Royale Fleming, in fact, renounces
all psychology as the motive of narrative and decides to transfer
' J
Urnberto Eco
245
246
Umberto Eco
(Thunderball),
of the books (or the spectacular interpretation which ftlms give of the
books) might make one think. Heming always affirmed that he had
thought of Bond as an absolutely ordinary person, and it is in contrast
with M that the real stature of 007 emerges, endowed with physical
attribute, with courage and fast reflexes, without possessing any other
quality in excess. It is rather a certain moral force, an obstinate fidelity
to the job - at the command of M, always present as a warning - that
allows him to overcome superhuman ordeals without exercising any
superhuman faculty.
The BondM relationship indubitably presupposes an affectionate
ambivalence, a reciptocal love-hate, and this without need to resort to
psychology. At the beginning of The Man with the Go/den Gun, emer
ging from a lengthy amnesia and conditioned by the Soviets, he tries a
kind of actual parricide by shooting at M with a cyanide pistol: the
gesture loosened a long-standing series of tensions (in the narrative)
which were aggravated every time that M and Bond found themselves
face to face.
Started by M on the road of Duty (at all costs), Bond enters into
conflict with the Villain. The opposition brings into play diverse vir,
tues, some of which are only variants of the basic couples previously
paired and listed. Bond indubitably represents Beauty and Virility as
opposed to the Villain, who appears often monstrous and sexually
impotent. The monstrosity of the Villain is a constant pOint, but to
emphasize it we must here introduce an idea of the method which wiU
also apply in examining the other couples. Among the variants we must
consider also the existence of secondary characters whose functions are
understood only if they are seen as 'variations' of one of the principal
personages, some of whose characteristics they 'wear'. The vicarious
roles function usually for the Woman and for the Villain; also for M
certain coUaborators with Bond represent the M figures; for example
Mathis n
i Cosino Royale, who preaches Duty in the appropriate M
manner (albeit with a cynical and Gallic air). As to the characteristics
of the Villain, let us consider them in order. In Casino Royale Le
Chiffre is pallid and smooth, with a crop of red hair, an almost feminine
mouth, false teeth of expensive quality , smaU ears with large lobes and
hairy hands. He did not smile. In Live and Let Die, Mr. Big, a Haiti
Negro, had a head that resembles a football, twice the normal size, and
_
247
almost spherical; 'the skin was grey-black, taut and shining like the face
of a weekld corpse in the river. It was hairless, except for some grey
brown fluff above the ears. There were no eyebrows and no eyelashes
and the eyes were extraordinarily far apart so that one could not focus
on them both, but only on one at a time . . . They were animal eyes,
not human, and they seemed to blaze.' The gums were pale pink.
in Diamonds are Forever the villain appears in three different fonns.
They are first of all Jack and Seraffrno Spang, the first of whom had a
humped back and red hair (,Bond did not remember having seen a red
haired hunchback before'), eyes which might have been hired from a
taxidennist, big ears with rather exaggerated lobes, dry red lips, and an
almost total absence of neck. Seraffino had a face the colour of ivory,
black puckered eyebrows, a bush of shaggy hair, jutting, ruthless jaws:
if it is added that Seraffino used to pass his days in a Spectreville of the
old West dressed in black leather chaps embeUished with leather, silver
spurs, pistols with ivory butts, a black belt and ammunition - also that
he used to drive a train of 1870 vintage furnished with a Victorian
carriage in Technicolour - the picture is complete. The third vicarious
figure is that of Sefior Winter, who travels with a ticket which reads:
'My blood group is F', and who is reaUy a killer in the pay of the
Spangs and is a gross and sweating individual with a wart on his hand, a
placid visage, and protruding eyes.
In Moonmker, Hugo Drax is six feet taU, with 'exceptionaUy broad'
shoulders, has a large and square head, red hair. The right half of hls
face is shiny and wrinkled from unsuccessful plastic surgery, the right
eye different from the left and larger because of a contraction of the
skin of the eyelashes ('painfully bloodshot'), has heavy moustaches,
whiskers to the lobes ofms ears, and patches of hair on his cheekbones:
the moustaches concealed with scant success a prognathous. upper jaw
and a marked protrusion of his upper teeth. The backs of his hands are
covered with reddish hair, and altogether he evokes the idea of a ring.
master at the circus.
In From Russw with Love the villain appears in the shape of three
vicarious figures: Red Grant, the professional murderer in the pay of
Smersh, with short, sandy-coloured eyelashes, colourless and opaque
blue eyes, a small, cruel mouth, innumerable freckles on his milkwhite
skin, and deep, wide pores; Colonel Grubozaboyschlkov, head of
Smersh, has a narrow and sharp face, round eyes like two polished
marbles, weighed down by two flabby pouches, a broad and grim
mouth and a shaven skull; fUially Rosa Klebb, with the humid pallid
lip stained with nicotine, the raucous VOice, nat and devoid of emotion,
is five feet four, no curves, dumpy anns, short neck, too sturdy ankles,
grey hairs gathered in a tight 'obscene' bun. She has shiny yeUow-brown
eyes, thick glasses, a sharp nose white with powder and large nostrils.
(fmberto Eco
'The wet trap of a mouth, that went on opening and shuttingasifit was
operated by wires under the chin' completes the appearance of a sexu
ally neuter person. In From Russia there occurs a variant that is dis
cernible only in a few other novels; there enters also upon the scene a
strongly drawn being who has many of the moral qualities of the Villain
but uses them in the end for good or at least fights on the side of
Bond. In From Russia an example is Darko Kerim, the Turkish agent.
AnaJogous to him is the head of the Japanese secret service in You Only
Live Twice, Tiger Tanaka; Draco in On Her Majesty 's Secret Service,
Enrico Colombo in 'Risico' (a story in For Your Eyes Only) and partially - Quarrel in Dr. No. These characteristics are at the same time
representative of the Villain and of M and we shall call them 'ambigu.
ous representatives'. With these Bond always stands in a kind of compe
titive alliance, he likes them and hates him at the same time, he uses
them, and admires them, he dominates them and is their slave.
In Dr. No, the Villain, besides his great height, is characterised by
the lack of hands, which are replaced by two metal pincers. His shaven
head has the appearance of a reversed raindrop, his skin is clear, with
out wrinkles, the cheekbones are as smooth as fme ivory, his eyebrows
dark as though painted on, his eyes are without eyelashes and look 'like
the mouths of two small revolvers', his nose is thin and ends very close
to ills mouth, which shows only cruelty and authority.
In Goldfinger the eponymous character is absolutely a textbook
monster; that is to' say he is characterised by a lack of proportion: 'He
was short, not more than five feet tall, and on top of the thick body
and blunt peasant legs was set almost directly into the shoulders a huge
i he had been put
and, it seemed, exactly round head. It was as f
together with bits of other people's bodies. Nothing seemed to belong.'
His 'representative' figure is that of the Korean, Oddjob, with fmgers
on ills hands like spatulas, with fmgertips like solid bone, a man who
could smash the wooden baJustrade of a staircase with a karate blow.
In Thunderball there appears for the fust time Ernst Starvo Blofeld,
who crops up again in On Her Majesty's Secret Service and You Only
Live Twice, where in the end he dies. As his vicarious incarnations, we
have in Thunderball Count uppe and Emilio Largo; both are handsome
249
f
ai
th
Umberto Eco
'The wet trap of a mouth, that went on opening and shutting as if it was
operated by wires under the chin' completes the appearance of a sexu
ally neuter person. In
cernible only in a few other novels; there enters also upon the scene a
strongly drawn being who has many of the moral qualities of the Villain
but uses them in the end for good or at least fights on the side of
Bond. In
feminine type; two eyes with a child-like gaze, and a mouth like a badly
healed wound under a heavy squat nose; altogether an expression of
hypocrisy, tyranny and cruelty 'on a Shakespearean level'; twenty
stone in weight; as we learn in On Her MajeslY s Secret Service, Blofeld
lacks lobes to his ears. His hair is a wiry black crew-cut. This curious
similarity of appearance among all the Villains in turn suggests a certain
unity to the Bond-Villain relationship. especially when it is added that
as a rule the wicked are distinguished also by certain racial and 'bio
graphical' characteristics.
The Villain is born in an ethnic area that stretches from central
Europe to the Slav countries and to the Mediterranean basin: as a rule
he is of mixed blood and his origins are complex and obscure; he is
Dr. No,
the lack of hands, which are replaced by two metal pincers. His shaven
head has the appearance of a reversed raindrop, his skin is clear, with
him
out wrinkles, the cheekbones are as smooth as fme ivory, his eyebrows
dark as though painted on, his eyes are without eyelashes and look 'like
the mouths of two small revolvers' , his nose is thin and ends very close
to his mouth, which shows only cruelty and authority.
which
blames particularly the Jews, the Germans, the Slavs and the Italians,
was short, not more than five feet tall, and on top of the thick body
and blunt peasant legs was set almost directly into the shoulders a huge
Disloyalty.
In
on his hands like spatulas, with fmgertips like solid bone, a man who
not basically disloyal, he still betrays his own bosses, and tries to
In
17IWlderball there appears for the first time Ernst Starvo BJofeld,
who crops up again in On Her Majesty's Secret Service and You Only
Live Twiie, where in the end he dies. As his vicarious incarnations, we
have in Thunderball Count Uppe and Emilio Largo; both are handsome
and personable, however vulgar and cruel, and their monstrosity is
purely mental. In 011 Her Majesty's Secret Service there appears Irma
Blunt, the soul damned by Blofeld, a distant reincarnation of Rosa
KJebb, and a series of villains in outline who perish tragically, killed by
an avalanche or by a train. In the third book the primary role is
resumed and results in the finish of the monster Blofeld, already des
has Jewish blood revealed by small ears with large lobes'. A gambler
cribed in
249
250
251
Umberto Eco
from N.A.T.O. two atomic bombs and with these blackmailing England
and America. That of On Her Majesty 's Secret SeTVic envisage e
training in a mountain clinic of girls with suitable allergies to condition
them to spread a mortal virus intended to ruin the agriculture and live
worthy of note.
stage
Of the secondary characters in From Russia the chief are from the
Soviets, and obviously in working for the Communist cause enjoy
comforts and power; Rosa Klebb, sexually neuter, 'might enjoy the act
physically, but the instrument was of no importance'; as to Red Granl,
he is a werewolf and kills for passion; he lives splendidly at the expense
of the Soviet government, in a villa with a bathing pool. The science
fiction plot consists in attracting Bond into a complicated trap, using
for bait a woman and an instrument for coding and decoding ciphers
and then killing and checkmating the English counter-spy.
Dr. No is a Chinese-Cerman halfbreed, works for Russia, shows no
definite sexual tendencies (having in his power Honeychile he plans to
have her tom to pieces by the crabs of Crab Key), he lives on a flourish
ing guano industry and plans to cause guided missiles launched by the
Americans to deviate from their course. In the past he has built up his
fortune by robbing the criminal organisation of which he had been
elected cashier. He lives, on his island , in a palace of fabulous pomp.
Goldfinger has a probable Baltic origin but has ako Jewish blood ; he
lives splendidly from commerce and from smuggling gold, by means
of which he flllances Communist movements in Europe; he plans the
theft of gold from Fort Knox (not its radioactivation as the rum states),
and to overcome the fmal barrier sets up an atomic attack in the neigh
bourhood of N.A.T.O.: he tries to poison the water of Fort Knox; he
does not have sexual relationships with the girl that he dOminates,
limiting himself to the acquisition of gold. He cheats at cards, using
expensive devices, Like binoculars and radio; he cheats to make money,
even though fabulously rich and always travelling with a stock of gold
in his luggage.
As to Blofeld, he is of a Polish father and a Greek mother; he
exploits his position as telegraph clerk to start a flourishing trade in
Poland in secret information, becomes chief of the most extensive
independent organisation for espionage, blackmail, rapine and extor
tion. Indeed with Blofeld Russia ceased to be the constant enemy because of the general international relaxation of tension - and the
part of the malevolent organisation is assumed b y Spectre. Spectre has
all the characteristics of Smersh, including the employment of Slav
Latin-Gennan elements, the use of torture and the elimination of
traitors, the sworn enmity to all the powers of the Free World. Of the
science-fiction plans of Blofeld, that of 71lUnderball consists in stealing
stock of the United Kingdom. That of You Only Live Twice, the last
refmed and lethal plants, thus doing grave and complex harm to the
returns the enormous sums won to the Service or to the girl of the
moment as occurred with Jill Masterson; thus even when he has money
need to show the superiority of the Briton. In Bond there are also
252
253
UmbeTto Eco
etc.) and Discomfort (Bond is always ready to abandon the easy life,
even when it appears in the guise of a Woman who offers herself, to
face a new aspect of Discomfort, the acutest point ofwhich is torture).
We have discussed the BondVillain dichotomy at length because in
fact it embodies
Case is dominated by the Spangs; Tatiana is the slave of Rosa Klebb and
her uncle: Bond possessed the nrst and the third, the second is killed
by the Villain, the fust tortured with gold paint, the second and third
are Lesbians and Bond redeems only the third; and so forth); more
diffuse and uncertain for the group of girls on Piz Gloria - each had
had an unhappy past, but Bond in fact possessed only one of them
(similarly he marries Tracy whose past was unhappy because of a series
of unions, dominated by her father Draco, and was killed in the end by
Blofeld, who realises at this point his domination and ends by Death
the relationship of Love which she entertained for Bond). Kissy Susuki
has been made unhappy by a Hollywoodian experience which has made
her chary of life and of men.
In every case Bond loses each of these women, either by her own
will or that of another (in the case ofGala it is the woman who marries
somebody else, although unwillingly) - either at the end of the novel
Largo; the English girl guests of Piz Gloria are under the hypnotic
Case). Thus, in the moment in which the Woman solves the opposition
to the Villain by entering with Bond into a purificatingpurified, saving
In
No, wandering pure and untroubled on the shores of his cursed island,
except that at the end Dr. No offers her naked body to the crabs
effort of the brutal Mander who had violated her, and had justly
would appear likely to resolve the contrast between the chosen race
ethnically inferior breed; but when the erotic relationship always ends
agent of the Service but who became the secretary of Hugo Drax and
established a relationship of submission to
'Game'
of a more intimate erotic union ofthe two through their common trial.
The various pairs of opposites (of which we have considered only a few
the role of the villain. The general scheme is (1) the girl is beautiful and
poles of each couple there are, in the course of the novel, alternative
good; (2) has been made frigid and unhappy by severe trials suffered in
adolescence; (3) this has conditioned her to the service of the ViUain;
solutions; the reader does not know at which point of the story the
Villain defeats Bond or Bond defeats the Villain, and so on. But
towards the end of the book the algebra has to follow a prearranged
pattern: as in the Chinese game that 007 and Tanaka play at the begum
i e , hand beats fist, fist beats two nngers, two
ing of You Only Live Twc
254
fingers beat hand. M beaLS Bond. Bond beats the Villain, the Villain
beats Woman, even
the Soviet Union, England beats the Impure Countries, Death beats
Love, Moderation beats Excess, and so forth.
255
Umberro Eco
helps at their killing).
I. Bond convalescing enjoys Woman, whom he then loses.
The scheme is invariable in the sense that all the elements are always
present in every novel (so that it might be afftrmed that the fundamen
Journey and the Meal; the Journey may be by Machine (and here there
tal rules of the game is 'Bond moves and mates in eight moves' - but,
due to the ambivalence Love-Death, so to speak, 'The Villain counter
moves and mates in eight moves'). It is not imperative that the moves
situations'. First of all there are several archetypal situations like the
receives his instructions from M: this is the case with Goldfinger, which
and he intends the meal as a factor in the game. Similarly, train and
three games played with the Villain, two seductions and three encoun
journey is fmished one of the two has fmished his moves and given
checkmate.
in each book. Bond always gambles and wins, against the Villain or with
some vicarious figure. The detail with which these games are describe d
secondary Villain K.riIcnku, and the two mortal duels of Bond with
Red Grant and with Rosa Klebb, who was arrested only after having
Russia with the parade of the Villain figures and the fust cOMection
defeated; the seduction of Tatiana, the Oight by train with the torture
long interlude in which Kerim and Krilenku appear and the latter is
suffered by the murdered Kerim, the victory over Red Grant, the
as a sequence of 'moves'
second round with Rosa Klebb who, while being defeated, inflicts
Bond enjoys love interludes with Tatiana before the fmal separation.
forms).
C. Bond moves and gives a rust check to the Villain or the Villain
gives fust check to Bond.
escape in the snow, pursuit, avalanche, hurried flight through the Swiss
countryside in 011 Her Majesty's Service).
different moments).
G. The Villain tortures Bond (with or without Woman).
Umberta Eco
257
curious
prologue
. situation.
which
second
Move D. The
Woman
Detailed journey by
background
situations.
Move B . First appearance in the
two
air; in the
Villains.
Ploy
to the Villain.
through.
crashes
into
the
Spangs.
Move E. Bond
fmally
Tiffany.
form of Winter.
possesses
pmy situation
situation
on
board
ship.
P/JJy
miniature .
the
tion
becomes
symbolised
on
in
with
trolley
tion of Tiffany.
gamble
indirect
Imperceptible duel be
Fl
Move B. Meeting with Jack Spang.
woman.
in the
role of go-between.
gambling at table, n
i
(Tiffany
croupier
play
with Tiffany as
Play
well.eamed
of
on
the
death
two
in
the
corpses.
Return home.
the
pccted of all
Fleming the scheme follows the same chain of events and has the same
prit, also his characteristics and his plans. The reader's pleasure consists
defeats
of his colleagues, by his method of work and by his police, and within
this heme events are unravelled that ale unexpected (and most unex
characters, and it is always known from the beginning who is the cui
repose
Move H. Bond
259
UmberloEco
in
and the rules - and perhaps the outcome - drawing pleasure simply
from following the minimal variations by which the victor realises his
objective.
We might compare a novel by Fleming to a game of football, in
which we know beforehand the place, the number and the personali.
ties of the players, the rules of the game, the fact that everything will
For each of the ten novels it would be possible to trace a general plan.
take place within the area of the great pitch; except that in a game of
The collateral inventions are rich enough to form the muscles of the
football the final information remains unknown till the very end: who
will win? It would be more accurate to compare these books to a game
Trotters defer the fmal moment, with what ingenious deviations they
to readers. The true and original plot remains immutable and suspense
is, by and large, like this: Bond is sent to a given place to avert a
tive activity, not only earns money but helps the cause of the enemies
works upon obvious material and does not aspire to describe ideological
destined to lose her. One might wonder how, within such limits, it is
3. A Manichean Ideology
is dominated by him and frees her from her past, establishing with her
and by torture. But Bond defeats the Villain, who dies horribly, and
rests from his great efforts in the arms of the woman, though he is
possible for the inventive fiction-writer to function, since he must
respond to a wealth of sensations and unforeseeable surprises. In fact, it
seen and of which he has grown fond . Under the guise of a machine
the unknown but the already known. In the pre-Heming detective story
260
seems ahnost to write his books for a two-fold reading public, aimed at
those who will take them as gospel truth or at those who see their
humoUr. But their tone is authentic, credible, ingenious, plainly aggres
sive. A man who chooses to write in this way is neither Fascist nor
racialist; he is only a cynic, a deviser of tales for general consumption.
If Fleming is a reactionary at all, it is not because he identifies the
figure of 'evil' with a Russian or a Jew. He is reactionary because he
makes use of stock figures. The user of such figures which personify
the Manichean dichotomy sees things in black and white, is always
dogmatic and intolerant - in short, reactionary; while he who avoids
set figures and recognises nuances, and distinctions, and admits contra
dictions,
and Villain stand for Beauty and the Beast; Bond restores the Lady to
the fullness of spirit and to her senses, he is the Prince who rescues
Sleeping Beauty; between the Free World and the Soviet Union,
Snow White
snow, in face and spirit.) The wicked man lives by gambling? He will be
called Le Chiffre. He is working for the Reds? He will be called Red and
Grant if he works for money, duly granted. A Korean professional killer
by unusual means will be Oddjob, one obsessed with gold Audc
Goldfinger; without insisting on the symbolism of a wicked man who is
called No , perhaps the half-lacerated face of Hugo Drax would b e con
jured up by the incisive onomatopoeia of his name. Beautiful and trans
parent, telepathic,
Solitaire would
jewellers in New York, and the beauty case of the mannequin. lngenu
munism' just as there are of the unpunished Nazi criminal. Fleming uses
Domino;
Kissy Suzuki (would it be accidental that she recalls the name of the
his
absolutely true. He has chosen the path of fable, and fable must be
ably evil that it seems impossible to take them seriously. And yet in
brief preface Fleming insists that
taken as truthful
261
UmbertoEco
chance, but also by guidance, that this model of style and of success
evokes the luxuries of Bond Street or Treasury bonds.
262
12
Angela McRobbie
265
Angela McRobbie
with a reputed readership of around 3m. (i.e. 79% of the entire popula
tion of Scotland over 15) is comforting, reassuring and parochial in
tone. Comprised, in the main, of anecdotal incidents drawn to the
attention of the reader in 'couthie' language, it serves as a 'Sunday
entertainer' reminding its readers of the pleasure of belonging to a
particular national culture.2
One visible result of this success has been, at a time of inflation and
of crisis, in the publishing world, 'enviably' high profit margins of 20%
or more. More than this, D.C. Thomson has expanded into other asso
ciated fields, with investments for example in the Clyde Paper Co.
(27.1 5%) and Southern TV (24.8%).
Two pOints should be made in this context. First, without necessarily
adhering to the 'traditional' conspiracy plot thesis, it would be naive to
envisage the 'interests' of such a company as being purely the pursuit of
increased profits. D.C. Thomson is not, in Jackie, merely 'giving the
girls what they want'. Each magazine, newspaper or comic has its own
conventions and its own style. But within these conventions and through
them a concerted effort is nevertheless made to win and shape the con
sent of the readers to a set of particular values.
The work of this branch of the media involves 'framing' the world
for its readers, and through a variety of techniques endowing with im
portance those topics chosen for inclusion. The reader is invited to share
this world with Jackie. It is no coincidence that the title is also a girl's
name. This is an unambiguous sign that its concern is with 'the category
of the subjeet',3 in particular the individual girl, and the feminine 'per
sona'. Jackie is both the magazine and the ideal girl. The short, snappy
name itself canies a string of connotations: British, fashionable (particu
larly in the 60s); modem; and cute; with the pet-form 'ie' ending, it
sums up all those desired qualities which the reader is supposedly seek
ing.
Second, we must see this ideological work as being grounded upon
certain so-called natural, even 'biolOgical' categories. Thus Jackie ex
presses the 'natural' features of adolescence in much the same way as,
say, Disney comics are said to capture the natural essence of childhood.
Each has, as Dorfman and Mattelart writing on Disney point out, a
'virtually biolOgically captive, predetemlined audicnce,.4 Jackie intro
duces the girl into adolcscence outlining its landmarks and characteristics
n
i detail and stressing importantly the problematic features as well as
the fun. Of course Jackie is not solely responsible for nurturing this
ideology of femininity. Nor would such an ideology cease to exist
should Jackie stop publication.
Unlike other fields of mass culture, the magazines of teenage girls
have not as yet bcen subject to rigorous critical analysis. Yel from
the most cursory of readings it is elear that they. too, like those more
Jnmediately
i.
associated with the sociology of the media - press, TV,
film, radio, etc. - are powerful ideological forces.
In fact women's and girls' weeklies occupy a privileged position.
Addressing themselves solely to a female market, their concern is with
promoting a feminine culture for their readers. They deftne and shape
the woman's world, spanning every stage from childhood to old age.
From Mandy, Bunty and Judy, to House and Home, the exact nature
of the woman's role is spelt out in detail, according to her age.
She progresses from adolescent romance where there are no explicitly
sexual encounters, to the more sexual world of 19, Honey or Over 21,
which in tum give way to marriage, childbirth, home-making, child care
and the Woman's Own. There are no 'male' equivalents to these pro
ducts. 'Male' magazines tend to be based on particular leisure pursuits
or hobbies, motor-cycling, fJ.Shing, cars or even pornography. There is
no consistent attempt to link 'interests' with age (though readership of
many magazines will obviously be higher among younger age groups)
nor is there a sense of a natural inevitable progression or evolution
attached to their readers' expected careers'. There is instead a variety
of possibilities with regard to leisure [. . J , many of which involve
active participation inside or outside the home.
It will be argued here that the way Jackie addresses 'girls' as a mono
lithic grouping, as do all other women's magazines, serves to obscure
differences, of class for example, between women. Instead it asserts a
sameness, a kind of false sisterhood, which assumes a common defini
tion of womanhood or girlhood. Moreover by isolating out a particular
'phase' or age as the focus of interest, one which coincides roughly with
that of its readers, the magazine is in fact creating this 'age-ness' as an
ideological construction. 'Adolescence' and here, female adolescence,
is itself an ideological 'moment' whose connotations are immediately
identifiable with those 'topics' included in Jackie. And so, by at once
deftning its readership vis.a-vis age, and by describing what is of rele
vance, to this age group, Jackie and women's magazines in general create
a 'false totality'. Thus we all want to know how to catch a man, lose
weight, look our best, or cook well! Having mapped out the feminine
'career' in such all-embracing terms, there is little or no space allowed
for alternatives. Should the present stage be unsatisfactory the reader is
merely encouraged to look forward to the next. Two things are happen
ing here. I ) The girls are being invited to join a close, intimate sorority
where secrets can be exchanged and advice given; and 2) they are also
being presented with an ideological bloc of mammoth proportions, one
which impn'sons them in a claustrophobic world of jealousy and com
petitiveness, the most unsisterly of emotions, to say the least.
.
-.
266
267
Angela McRobbie
its own specific material practices. While
do
ultimately
seen as
extent that it
the open sagging mouths and glazed eyes, the hands mindlessly drum
ming in time
to
and
becomes
cure for all ills. It is, to quote Willis, 'a repository of quint
emotions and purifying the spirit. What this argument omits to mention
are the
material
Mass
culture is seen
conspiracy
thesis
and it, too, sees mass culture as 'fodder' for the masses;
the result of a ruling class plot whose objective it is to keep the working
[.
IS a necessary separa
pOints to pop
consumerist tenns, those values and ideas held by both working class
youth and by sections of middle class y uth. Yoh, that is, is defined
in tenns of values held, which are often In oPPosItion to those held by
the establishment, by their parents, the school, work, etc. Such a defini
these fields: working class youth, denied access to other 'higher' forms
on
and
with
of the
subcultural group in
question but not exactly in their original fonns. The group subverts the
original
object(s) thereby extending the range of its signifying power. These new
meanings undennine and can even negate the previous or established
meaning(s) so
that the
object
ample, the 'style' of the skinheads, the 'mod' suit, the 'rocker' motor
268
example. The point here is that despite these possible uses, the maga
z.ine itself has a powerful ideological presence as a fornI, and as such
demands analysis carried out apart from these uses or 'readings'. (. . .J
While the argument made here will include strands from the posi
tions outlined above, its central thrust will represent a substantial shift
away from them. What I want to suggest is that Jackie occupies the
sphere of the personal or private, what Gramsci calls 'Civil Society' ('the
ensemble of organisms that are commonly called Private,).10 Hcgemony
is sought uncoercively on this terrain, which is relatively free of direct
State interference. Consequently it is seen as an arena of 'freedom', of
'free choice' and of 'frec time'. This sphere includes:
not only associations and organisations like political parties and the
press, but also the family, which combines ideological and economic
functions. II
[. . .) Jackie exists within a large, powerful, privately owned publishing
apparatus which produces a vast range of newspapers, magazines and
comics. It is on this level of thc magazine that teenage girls are subjected
to an explicit attempt to win consent to the dominant order - in tems
of femininity, leisure and consumption, i.c. at the level of culture. It is
worth noting at this POint that only three girls in a sample of 56 claimed
to read any newspapers regularly. They rarely watched the news on tele
vision and their only prolonged contact with the written word was at
school and through their own and their mothers' magazines. Occasion
ally a 'risque' novel like Richard Allen's Skingirl would be passed round
at school, but otherwise the girls did not read any literature apart from
'love' comics.
The 'teen' magazine is, therefore, a highly privileged 'site'. Here the
girl's consent is sought uncoercively and in her leisure time. [ . . .] While
there is a strongly coercive element to those other terrains which teen
age girls inhabit, the school and the family, in her leisure time the girl is
officially 'free' to do as she pleases. And as we have seen , teenage girls
show a marked lack of interest in organised leisure activities. showing
instead a preference for dancing or merely 'sitting about'. Otherwise the
girls n
i the sample defined their leisure interests in terms of consumer
goods - clothes, makeup, magaz.ines, records and cigarettes. It is on
the open market then that girls are least constrained by the display of
i the ability to buy a ticket,
social control. The only qualification here s
magaZine or Bay City Roller Tshirt. Here they remain relatively un
in tcrfered with. [ . . .1
Commercial leisure enterprises with their illusion of freedom have,
then, an attraction for youth. And this 'freedom' is pursued, meta
phorically, inside the covers of Jackie. With an average readership age
Angelo McRobbie
269
of 10 to 14, Jackie pre figures girls' entry into the labour market as
'free labourers' and its pages are crammed full of the 'goodies' which
this later freedom promises. Jackie girls are never at school, they are
enjoying the fruits of their labour on the open market. They live in
large cities, frequently in flats shared with other young wage earners
like themselves.
This image of freedom has a particular resonance for girls when it is
located within and intersects with the longer and again ideolOgically
constructed 'phase' they inhabit in the present. Leisure has a special
importance in this period of 'brief flowering',12 that is, in those years
prior to marriage and settling down, after which they become dual
labourers in the home and in production. Leisure in their 'single' years
is especially important because it is here that their future is secured. It
is in this sphere that they go about finding a husband and thereby seal.
ing their fate. [. . . J
The World of Jackie
What then are the key features which characterise Jackie? First there is
a 'lightness' of tone. a nonurgency, which holds true right through the
magazine, particularly in the use of colour, graphics and advertisements.
It asks to be read at a leisurely pace, indicating that its subject matter
is not wholly serious, is certainJy not 'news'. Since entertainment and
leisure goods are designed to arouse feelings of pleasure as weU as inter
est, the appearance of the magazine is inviting, its front cover shows a
'pretty' girl smiling happily. The dominance of the visual level which is
maintained throughout the magazine, reinforces this notion f leisure.
It is to be glanced through, looked at and only finally read. Published
at weekly intervals, the reader has time to peruse each item at her own
speed. She also has time to pass it round her friends or swap it for
another magazine.
Rigid adherence to a certain style of lay-out and patterning of fea
tures ensures a familiarity with its structure(s). The girl can rely on
Jackie to cheer her UP. entertain her, or sollie her problems each week.
The 'style' of the magazine, once established, facilitates and encourages
. and uneven reading, in much the same way as newspapers also
partial
do. The girl can quicldy tum to the centre page for the pinup, glance
at the fashion page and leave the problems and picture stories which are
the 'meat' of the magazine, till she has more time.
Articles and features are carefully arranged to avoid one 'heavy'
feature following another. The black and white picture stories taking
up between 2lh. and 3 full pages are always broken up by a coloured
ldverl, or beauty feature, and the magaz.ine opens and doses by inviting
268
Angela McRobbie
example. The point here is that despite these possible uses, the maga
zine itself has a powerful ideological presence as a form, and as such
demands analysis carried out apart from these uses or 'readings'. [. . }
While the argument made here will include strands rrom the posi
tions outlined above, its central thrust will represent a substantial shift
away rrom them. What I want to suggest is that Jackie occupies the
sphere of the personal or private, what Cramsci caUs 'Civil Society' ('the
,
ensemble or organisms that are commonly called Private ).10 Hegemony
is sought uncoercively on this terrain, which is relatively rree of direct
State interference. Consequently it is seen as an arena or 'freedom', or
'free choice' and or'rree time'. This sphere n
i cludes:
.
not only associations and organisations like political parties and the
press, but also the ramily, which combines ideological and economic
functions. II
[ . J Jackie exists within a large, powerful, privately owned publishing
apparatus which produces a vast range or newspapers, magazines and
comics. It is on this level or the magazine that teenage girls are subjected
to an explicit attempt to win consent to the dominant order - in terms
of femininity, leisure and consumption, i.e. at the level or culture. It is
worth noting at this point that only three girls in a sample of 56 claimed
to read any newspapers regularly. They rarely watched the news on tele
vision and their only prolonged contact with the written word was at
school and through their own and their mothers' magazines. Occasion
ally a 'risque' novel like Richard Allen's Skingiri would be passed round
at school, but otherwise the girls did not read any literature apart from
'love' comics.
The 'teen' magazine is, therefore, a highly privileged 'site'. Here the
girl's consent is sought uncocrcively and in her leisure time. [ . .J While
there is a strongly coercive element to those other terrains which teen
age girls inhabit, the school and the ramily, in her leisure time the girl is
officially 'rree' to do as she pleases. And as we have seen, teenage girls
show a marked lack of interest in organised leisure activities, showing
instead a prererence for dancing or merely 'sitting about'. Otherwise the
girls in the sample defined their leisure interests in terms of consumer
goods - clothes, makeup, magazines, records and Cigarettes. It is on
the open market then that girls are least constrained by the display or
social control. The only qualification here is the ability to buy a ticket,
magazine or Bay City Roller Tshirt. Here they remain relatively un
interrered wilh. [ . . . J
Commercial leisure enterprises with their illusion of freedom have,
then, an attraction for youth. And th.is 'rreedom' is pursued, meta
phorically, inside the covers of Jackie. With an average readership age
.
269
270
271
Angeli1 McRobbie
Boyfriend
known pop song and its singer to both inspire the story and give it moral
weigh!!)
The title, then, anchors the story it introduces. In our sample these
include:
I've Got You', 'Come Fly With Me', and 'Where Have All The Flowers
Gone?'
Jackie
a 'turning inwards' to the sphere of the 'soul', the 'heart', -:lr less meta
phorically, the emotions. On the one hand, of course, (Y..ctain features
do change - fashion is itself predicated upon change and upon being
'up to date'. But the degree of change even here is qualified - certain
features remain the same, e.g. the models' 'looks', poses, the style of
drawing and its positioning within the magazine and so on. All that does
change is the length of the hem, shade of make up, style of shoe, etc.
Above all,
This concern with romance pervades every story and is built into them
through the continued use of certain formal techniques and styles.
For a start, the way the characters look indicates clearly that this is
serious, not 'kids' stuff'. They are all older and phYSically more mature
than the intended reader. Each character confonns to a wellestablished
and recognisable standard of beauty or handsomeness and they are all
'looked at'. This overriding concern with visuals affects every feature.
But its visual appearance and style also reflect the spending power of its
made to
Jackie,
realm, par
excellence,
figure and the tiny web of social relationships surrounding him or,
usually, her. Rarely are there more than two or three characters in each
plot and where they do exist it is merely as part of the background or
scenery - n
i the cafe, at the disco or in the street.
and white . This, along with the boldness of the drawings, the starkness
of stroke and angularity of the flgures, conspires to create an impression
of 'realism' and seriousness. The form of the stories alone tells us that
of life; the
key to happiness, etc. It is this blend which gives the Jackie romance its
characteristic navour. In general terms this is nothing new, these stories
owe a great deal to popular cinema romances, and to novelettes. For a
Jackie
picture stories are similar in form to those comic strips, and tales
flll the
jected lover alone by herself as the sun sets - the moon comes up - to
name but a few. But this cinematic resemblance is based on more than
just association. The very fonn of the comic strip has close links with
First the titles clearly announce a concern with 'you', 'me', 'love' and
'happiness'. Romantic connotations are conveyed through the relation
ship between titles and the names of 'pop' songs and ballads.
start the characters closely resemble the anonymous but distinctive type
of the 'mm star' - dewy eyed women and granitejawed heroes. Their
(Jackie
clips,
272
the page, the stories 'rise' to a climax and resolution, graphically illus
trated in larger images erupting across the page_
From these clips we can see clearly that the emotional liCe is defined
and lived in tenns oC
momellls
rOl1UJnce
great
visual impact of the clinch, the proposal, the wedding day. Together
these
273
Angela McRobbie
Jackie
'look'. The girls are 'mod' but neat and conventional, rarely are
visual images composed and set within a series of frames laid out across
about it. Bereft of accent, dialect, slang or vulgarity it remains the inven
visually,
tion of the media - the language of pop, and of Radio I disc jockeys.
resemble ftlm-clips and tell the story by 'freezing' the action into sets
of 'stills': Unlike other comics
all of which convey an image of youth 'on the move', of 'a whole scene
going' and of 'wowee dig the slick chick in the corner', 'a nice piece of
talent', teenagers 'doing their own thing'. But these teenagers are a
[ . .J Thus the moment of reading and looking are collapsed into one,
with
descriptions; she merely 'takes it in' and hurries on to the next image.
The techniques through which this relay operates are well known; -
things done. They are constantly seen 'raving it up' at discos, going for
trips in boyfriends' cars, or else going on holiday. And yet as we shall
a series of small bubbles which drift upwards away from the character's
nothing but pursuing each other, and far from being a pleasureseeking
'intellectual' pursuit.
group,
Jackie
even their best friends and in search of fulfliment only through a part
the spilling out of one visual image over the page. This image sums up
ner. The anonymity of the language then parallels the strangely amor
Jackie
graphically the fraught nature of the moment; the moment when the
phous
region, the reader is unable to 'locate' them in any social context. They
are devoid of history. Bound together by an invisible 'generational con
to; or when the girl, let down by her boy, rushes out of the coffee bar
'heart' of this world is the individual girl looking for romance. But rom
well bump into the prospective boyfriend, who lurks round every corner.
It is this which determines their inclusion in the plot; the possibility
that everyday life could be transfonned into social li/e.
Within these frames themselves the way the figures look, act, and
recognition of this fact that sets all girls against each other, and
fonns the central theme in the picture stories. Hence the girl's constant
worries, as she is passionately embraced; 'can it las!?' or 'how can I be
sure his love is for ever?'
Earlier we asserted that Jackie was concerned with 'the category of
the subject', with the constitution of the feminine personality. Indeed
'personality' itself fomlS an important organising category in the maga
zine. Each week there is some concern with 'your' personalitY, how to
know it, change it or understand those of your friends, boyfriends,
families. In the picture stories 'personaJity' takes on an important role
alongside 'looks'. The characters depend for their meaning on well
known sereotypes. That is, to be 'read' correctly the reader must pos.
sess prevlOus cultural knowledge of the 'types' of subjects which inhabit
his or her social world.
Jackie boys fall into four categories. First, there is the fun-loving
:
grinning, flirtatious boy who is irresistible to all girls; second, the 'tousled
sctterbrained zany' youth who inspires 'maternal' feelings in girls;
third, the emotional, shy, sensitive and even 'arty' type; and fourth the
juvenil delin9uen" usually portrayed on his motor bike looking Id,
aggreSSIVe but sexy and whom the girl must 'tame',
In every case the male figure is idealised and romanticised so that
ere is a real discrepancy between Jackie boys and those boys who are
discussed on the Cathy and Claire page. The central point here is that
Jackie boys are as interested in romance as the girls,
and
Angela McRobbie
275
Most of these characters have changed little since the magazine first
appeared in 1964. Their 'style' is still rooted in the 'Swinging London'
of the mid-60s. The girls have large, heavily made-up eyes, pale lips and
tousled hair, turned up noses and tiny 'party' mouths (0 la Jean Shrimp
ton). They wear c10tlles at least partly reminiscent of the 60s, hipster
skirts with large belts. polo neck sweaters and, occasionally, 'nared'
trousers. Despite the fact that several of these girls introduce themselves
as 'plain', their claims are contradicted by the accompanying image
indicating that they are without exception 'beautiful'. Likewise the
men (or boys) are ruggedly handsome, young versions of James Bond
(to the extent that some even wear 'shorty' raincoats with 'turned-up'
collars). They have thick eyebrows, smiling eyes, and 'granite' jaws.
While some of the stories seem to be set in London, the majority give
no indication of 'locale'. The characters speak without an accent and
are usually without family or community ties. They have all left sehool,
but 'work' hovers invisibly in the background as a necessary time nIler
between one evening and the next or can sometimes be a pathway to
glamour, fame or romance, Recognisable 'social' backgrounds are rare.
The small town, equated with boredom, is Signified through the use of
strangely anachronistic symbols - the coffee bar, and the motor-bike
and the narrow street. The country, on the other hand, is where the girl
escapes /0, following a broken romance or an unhappy love affair. But
when her problems are resolved, she invariably returns to the city where
things 'really happen', But it is a city strangely lacking a population
that these teenagers inhabit. There are no foreigners, black teenagers,
old people or children, No married couples and rarely any families or
siblings. It is a world occupied almost solely by young adults on the
brink of pairing-up as couples.
The messages which these images and stories together produce are
limited and unambiguous, and are repeated endlessly over the years.
These are (I) the girl has to fight to get and keep her man, (2) she can
never trust another woman unless she is old and 'hideous' in which case
she doesn't appear in the stories anyway and (3) despite this, romance,
and being a girl, are 'fun'.
No story ever ends with two girls alone together and enjoying each
other's company. Occasionally the flat mate or best friend appears in
a role as 'confidante' but these appearances are rare and by implication
unimportant. A happy ending means a happy couple, a sad one - a
Single girl. Having eliminated the possibility of strong supportive rela
tionships between girls themselves, and between people of different
ages, Jackie stories must elevate to dizzy heights the supremacy of the
heterosexual romantic partnership.
This is, it may be argued, unsurprising and predictable. But these
stories do more than this. They cancel out completely the possibility
276
of any relationship other than the romantic one between girl and boy.
(4)
They make it impossible for any girl to talk to, or think about, a boy in
277
A ngew McRobbie
showing an interest in another girl, she realises that it is really love that
she feels for him and their romance blossoms.)
Boys and men are, then, not sex objects but romantic objects. The
code of romance neatly displaces that of sexuality which hovers some
where in the background appearing fleetingly in the guise of paSSion,
But those story-types are worked through and expounded by the use of
certain conventions or devices and it is through these that the thematic
structure can be seen most clearly.
The first of these is the convention of 'time' or of 'the temporal'.
Under this heading four different modes can be categorised, including
the flashback. Here the opening clips signify 'aloneness' conveyed
through images of isolation; a single figure against, say, a rugged, beau
or the 'clinch'. Romance is about the public and sociol effects of and
sing one's friends with a new handsome boyfriend, with being flattered
by the attention and compliments lavished by admirers. It is about
playing games which 'skirt about' sexuality, and which include sexual
and this is classified and expounded upon through the use of the flash
back. 'I remember only a year ago and it was all so . . .' 'But Dave was
innuendo, but which are somehow 'nicer', 'cleaner' and less 'sordid'.
Romance is the girls' reply to male sexuality. It stands n
i opposition
to their 'just being after the one thing'; and consequently it makes sex
seem dirty, sordid, and UfUlttr4ctive. The girl's sexuality is understood
different from the others even then.' The reader is transported into the
and experienced not in tenns of a physical need of her own body, but in
ment etc. The difference between the past and present state is empha
sised by changes of season, and particularly by changes of expression.
Warm weather, for example, goes with smiling, happy faces gazing in
Jackie is also therefore constructing male and female roles ensuring that
the story along, and it is neatly concluded with a return to the present,
exudes romantic possibilities. What Jackie does is to map out all those
differences which exist between the sexes but to assert that what they
do share s
i a common interest, indeed devotion to, 'romance'.
-.
would not hold the separation of fonn and content as being either
The second temporal device is the diary. Again this allows the reader
we
a plotting, and a guilty best friend reading her friend's outpourings. But
popular.
through her dress and background dissatisfied with her life and bored
by her persistent suitor. When she is transported, magically, into the
Angelo McRobbie
are used to glamourise the past and criticise the present which is, by
implication, bereft of romance. (Bikinis and uniforms don't connote
sameness
which links past and present. Underpinning all the adventures and his
romance,
(I) the
romance is blended with comedy. Here the drawings are less dramatic
and are characterised by softer lines. The plots revolve around unusual,
i romantic meetings. At
unlikely events and coincidences resulting n
their centre is the 'zany' boy whose bizarre hobbies lead him through
a number of disasters until eventually he Hnds a steady girl who 'tames'
him. ('Now they're crazy about each other.')
'Zany' girls of this type are rare. Girls are not really interested in
anything outside the confines of femininity, besides which, no girl would
willingly make a public spectacle of herself in this way . Often, perhaps
in the city centre who has to await the arrival of the handsome, young,
zookeeper. Another favourite centres around the ritual of walking the
dog and taking an evening stroll in the local park where numerous hand
some young men are doing the same thing or are willing to be pestered
by her dog - and so on. 'Hmm, funny names you call your cats.'
good bet! He is unlikely to spend his time chasing other girls and is in
deed incapable of doing so, he is the lovable 'twit', who needs mothering
as well as lOving. (Some Mothers Do 'Ave 'EmO
Second, there is the plot which depends on a recognisable social
locale. The hospital appears frequently here and carries rich connota
tions of romance and drama. A girl, for example, is recovering from a
throat operation and discovers her boy is going out with someone else,
but she overcomes her disappointment by meeting someone new in the
hospital.
In another story a dashing young man catches sight of a pretty girl
History then provides the Jackie team with a whole set of issues which
torical tableaux is
279
'seasons'.
The
there is a moral here, if love strikes, or simply happens 'out of the blue'
i look out for it, be alert without actively
then all the girl needs to do s
seeking it. In fact this allows her, once again, to remain passive, she
certainly can't approach a young man, only a coincidence may bring
278
279
frailty, passivity and fragility.) At the same time, this story is incorpor
relate to the eXigencies of plot. Thus we have (I ) the 'zany' tale where
romance is blended with comedy. Here the drawings are Jess dramatic
and are characterised by softer lines. The plots revolve around unusual,
their centre is the 'zany' boy whose bizarre hobbies lead him through
a number of disasters until eventually he finds a steady girl who 'tames'
are used to glamourise the past and criticise the present which is, by
implication, bereft of romance. (Bikinis and uniforms don't connote
them.
I. 1
in
romantic meetings. At
'Zany' girls of this type are rare. Girls are not really interested
in
girl
in the city centre who has to await the arrival of the handsome, young,
zookeeper. Another favourite centres around the ritual of walking the
dog and taking an evening stroll in the local park where numerous hand
some young men are doing the same thing or are willing to be pestered
by her dog - and so on. 'Hmm, funny names you call your cats.'
the doorstep one Christmas but are turned away. Two guests help them
good bet! He is unlikely to spend his time chasing other girls and is in
dccd incapablc of doing so, he is the lovable 'twit', who needs mothering
Second, there s
i the plot which depends on a recognisable social
past (and is thus contained and manageable). People marry into their
own class and their own race. (When a nurse falls for a wounded German
locale. The hospital appears frequently here and carries rich connota
tions of romance and drama. A girl, for example, is recovering from a
throat operation and discovers her boy is going out with someone else,
and the prisoner returns to Germany.) Similarly, social class, too 'con
troversial' an issue to appear in stories set in the present, can be acknow
ledged as hailing existed in the past.
Hi
story then provides the Jackie team with a whole set of sisues which
are more safely dealt with
in
foreigners and war. But history also means unchanging eras character
Angela McRobbie
the bus-stop, on the bus, in the park, in the flat downstairs, depending
on luck, coincidence or 'stars'. 'He must be on day release . . . he's on
the train Mondays and Wednesdays but not the rest of the week.' And
there is a moral here, if love strikes, or simply happens 'out of the blue'
then all the girl needs to do is look out for it, be alert without actively
seeking it. In fact this allows her, once again, to remain passive, she
certainly can't approach a young man, only a coincidence may bring
thc!" together (thOUgh she may work on bringing about such a co
incidcnce). At any rate she certainly can't hang about the bus-stop or
strect comer waiting to be picked up.
This convention of place also, by implication, deems leisure facilities
for youth unnecessary. There is no need for them, ifyour boy is on the
bus or train each morning. There are no stories set in youth clubs, com-
Angela McRobbie
munity cen tres, even libraries or evening classes, and discos only appear
in the park, by a handsome young man. When he begins to take her out
to
individuals in search of or waiting for a partner and when this occurs all
other leisure needs evaporate.
The third convention takes the idea of luck or coincidence one step
supernatural
n
i clude magazines, leprechauns, magic lamps and dreams themselves.
But the dream or fantasy occupies a central place in the girls' life
anyway - to an extent all the picture stories are fantasies, and escapist.
281
she insists on going to art galleries and museums, but gives herself away
when his 'clever' friend shows that she doesn't know what she's talking
about. Breaking down she admits to reading cheap romances inside the
love of the boy, So much for Jackie's anti-inteUectualism. All the girl
needs is
Jackie asserts the absolute and natural separation of sex roles. Girls
juvenile delinquents, but girls can only be feminine. The girl's life
excellence.
par
taken
in little girls, Mitchell describes their retreat into the 'Oedipus complex'
is taken in an embrace,
to be loved.
Here the girl is at odds with her family and siblings (who rarely appear
they are pretty and unassertive. Boys can be footballers, pop stars, even
is
with it.
ing it with concepts of love, passion and eternity, romance gets trapped
within its own contradictions, and hence we have the 'problem page'.
Once declared and reciprocated this love is meant to be lasting, and
is based on fidelity and pre-marital monogamy. But the girl knows that
where
she,
the possibility that her boy's passion will, and can be, roused by almost
tion, despair, fatalism - it's 'all in the game'. love has its losers, it must
be admitted, but for the girl who has lost, there is always the chance
that it will happen again, this time with a more reliable boy. Girls don't,
then, fight back. Female 'flirts' always come to a 'bad end'; they are
abandoned by their admirers who quickJy turn their attention to the
quiet, trustin g best friend who had always been content to sit in the
background.
Thus we have a twin, madly jealous of her pretty sister, who tries to
'steal' the sister's boyfriend when she has to stay in bed with flu.
Another comlllon theme (echoed in the problem page) is the girl with
the 'brainy' family . In one case such a girl is seen reading Shakespeare
Conclusion
What, then, are the central features of Jackie in so far as it presents its
Romance problems, fashion, beauty and pop mark out the limits of the
282
A ngeia McRobbie
excellence,
for the teenage girl. The Jackie girl is alone in her quest for
love ; she refers back to her female peers for advice, comfort and re
assurance
ollly
- s
i an unambiguous sign of failure. To achieve self-respect, the girl has
sociJJ/ re/a
adolescence - one which pervades every page and is not just deceptively
'frozen' into a single 'energetic/glamorous' pose as in the fashion pages
and Tampax adverts in Jackie.
Notes
I . See G.L. While, Women's Magazines, 19631968 (1 970), Appendix IV.
283
2. See G. Rosei, 'The Private Life of Lord Snooty', SundDy 1'I'mes Magazine,
8. Ibid., p. 1.
9. J. Clarke, S. H311, T. Jefferson and B. Roberts (eds.), Re$istancr Through
Rituslt (Hutchinson, London, 1976), p. 55.
10. S. Hall, B. Lumley and G. McLennan, 'Politics and Ideology: Gramsci',
Working Papm in Cultural Studies, no. 10 (1977), p. 5 I.
I L IbKl., p. 5 I .
12. R. Hoggart, The Uses ofLiteracy (Chatto and Windus, London, 19.57),
p. 5 I .
Paul Willis
13
Paul Willis
tions of the same activities: a coffee in the coffee bar, a drinlt and a
game of darts in the local pub, a game of table-tennis or pin-ball in the
Sue (unemployed, girlfriend of Joe). Percy and Roger were not part of
Mick's group of friends, but joined our discussions on a few occasions,
and were always around the club and well known to all its members.
[- - J
around the motor-bike within this group. The motor-bike both reflec
ted and generated many of the central meanings of the bike culture . It
The leaders' jackets were frequently adorned with badges and mottoes.
Though this group and style was clearly marked out during the 1960s
by the opposition - accomplished partly through the media - to the
one o f the main interests of the motorbike boys. Most of their activi
'mods', the culture still exists today. The style represents one basic
fonn of working-class culture as it is lived by the young, and contains
make-up.
In a general and unspecific way, it was clear that the motor-bike was
ties were based on this interest . A large part of conversation was devo
ted to the motor-cycJe : discussing new models or comparing perform.
age from
i
me to his particular group of friends_ These friends, ranging n
lale teens to middle 20s, were not involved in the fonnal structure.of
the club, and strongly resisted its latent functions of social control,
although they had attended regularly over a number of years. Over the
next few weeks, I developed a kind of relationship with this group and
finally suggested that they might like to lislen to records, and discuss
their reactions and whatever else interested them on tape. They agreed
- and certainly out of no obligation or coercion. It was frequently
impossible to get them all together at one time, and J often spent the
evening just drifting around the club chatting here and there or
generally observing things. It should be remembered that my study was
of the larger social and cultural whole and not of a specific group or of
specific individuals except in so far as they embodied central meanings
and values. I was not perturbed by this randomness of contact. General
284
285
I.
Paul Willis
287
288
expen'ence
keep the jacket close to the skin, trousers are not tucked away in boots
and socks, there
is
The lack of the helmet allowed long hair to blow freely back in the
wind, and this, with the studded and ornamented jackets, and the
aggressive style of riding gave the motor-bike boys a fearsome look
which amplified the wildness, noise, surprise and intimidation of the
motorbike. The point of fast driving was the experience, the expressive
force, the public image - never the fact - of speed.
These were some of the dialectical influences of the bike on the
appearance and experience of the boys. In the reverse moment of this
relation to the motorbike, they had made physical changes to their
The law now prohibits the usc of a motor-bike without a helmet. It did not in
196970 when this research was undertaken.
Paul Willis
289
machines. They partly changed the objective nature of the bike better
to express their own preferred meanin.
Handlebars were often of the large cattle-horn type which reqUired
an upright sitting position with hands and anns level with the shoulders.
'This considerably increases drag, and ironically limits the top speed of
the motor-bike. But it improves handling ability and increases the
sensation o f speed dramatically. The conventional motor.-cyclist does
exactly the opposite, lowers the handlebars and puts the footrests
farther back, so that the body can lie virtually flat along the bike and
present the minimum surface for wind resistance. Chromium-plated
.
all helped to glve
practice to remove the baffles from the silencer box on the exhaust, in
order to allow the straight.through thumping of the exhaust gases from
the cylinder to carry their explosion directly into the atmosphere. The
effect could be startling. The breathy, loud, slightly irregular bang and
splutter brought the hardness and power o f the metal piston exploding
down the metal cylinder, abruptly and inevitably reversing up again,
right out into the still air. The minutely engineered turn of the crank
shaft brought a power and impersonal ferocity right out into the
vulnerable zone of human sensibilities.
An alleyway led up the side of the church to the coffee bar of the
club. Members often parked their bikes along this narrow passageway,
and stood by them talking, starting and revving their bikes, discussing
technical matters or indeed any matters at
...
Paul Willis
35,
PW:
Joe:
PW:
Joe:
'J
PW:
Why?
Tim:
Tim:
Fred:
Fred:
sed book lying open all the time with the names and dates of the death
of past members of the club who had been killed on the road. The pages
were turned daily to record exact anniversaries. It was one of the
familiar sights around the club to see, alone, or in groups, past girl
friends, friends, acquaintances or admirers of a particular victim looking
at the book in solemn ritual silence.
Nonnally the motor-bike boys treated the church with complete dis
regard. Before the discussions Joe, Mick and others would often play
with a large medicine ball, throwing it back and forth to each other
down the length of the church, crashing it through the chairs and
bouncing it up on to the altar. This does not imply sacrilege. They
simply treated the church as any other building. However, when a memo
very well-attended memorial service in the church and a formal entering
church service that the rider was well and truly recognized as dead, and
could stay dead, and was marked as such in the memorial book: a kind
of fonnal root for the dark glory, the collective mythology of the
motor-bike culture. It did not matter that the church rituals were not
Certainly the death rate from motor-bike accidents at the club was
appalling. This is from the official reports on the club concerning the
period summer 1967:
understood -. they could not have been understood in the way the
church would have wanted them understood and they were anyway
filled up from the outside with new meaning. What mattered was the
sense of presence, the sense of order, the sense of marking within time
within the culture. On the altar table in the church was a large embos
ber o f the club was killed in a motor..c;yc1e crash, there was always a
291
of a crucial event. Thus, at these times. there was very special conjunc
tion of a traditional received form and a modern informal form. The
motor-bike boys who in so many other circumstances delighted in the
outrage of conventional society, at a certain point within the internal
expressive life of their culture - at a point which was both crisis and
transcendence - turned in an act of cultural fusion to a traditional
institution to borrow its solemnity and ritual. This regard for death,
the fascination in its rituals, the need to push beyond the nonnal
bounds of their culture for these rituals, attest the degree to which
*The
Paul Willis
Fred:
Joe:
293
AlIisoll James
14
Allison James
Source:
295
perri
Ht social recognition have been manipulated and disguised by
children in tentlS of their alternative society.
By confusing the adult order children create for themselves consider
able room for movement within the limits imposed upon them by
adult society. This deflection of adult perception is crucial for both the
maintenance and continuation of the child's culture and for the growth
'Ihis article derives from an incident which took place while I was doing
fieldwork in the North East of England, investigating the structure and
experience of childhood.
on the quality of the paint used by the National Coal Board on their
properties, grumbled that it was 'aU ket - rubbish' and that it would
peel off in a few months. Before
'ket' among children who used it as their leon for sweets, especially
cheaper ones. This difference in use intrigued me, particularly when I
remembered that sweets, from the adult perspective, are literally the
(1 974)
animals dying a
p.
(1969,
1 16). The Opies (1959) suggested that many old dialect words which
in
In
of the concept of the self for the individual child. The process of
becoming social involves a conceptual separation between 'seW and
think with'. the subject of food in relation to the social body has
1966;
Hubner,
1967;
and Tambiah,
1969). In all
1964; Douglas,
these analyses it is
this case the semantic content is not stored, but instead undergoes a sig.
argued that ideas people hold concerning the edibility of certain types
of food are linked 10gicaUy to other conceptual domains and that, b y
A word
1979)
294
Tambiah argues that 'cultures and social systems are, after all, not
only thought but also lived' so that particular attention should be
given to exactly what people let inside their bodies (1969, p. 165).
More recently Mary Douglas (1975) has directly confronted the
subject of food in her analysis of the major food categories in Britain.
She identifies the two main categories as meals and drinks. Of the two,
meals are more
into 'rust, second, main [and) sweet' courses, whereas drinks possess
no such structuring
296
Allison James
297
focus of activity, for children of aU ages in the youth club, is the buying
to be
not usurp the place of meals. For the child, as I hope to show, the
i meals which disrupt the eating of sweets.
reverse is true: it s
because they are cheap and that children, in general, have less money to
spend than adults, certain problems should b e considered. Why don't
adults buy 'kels"! For lOp, the price of a chocolate bar, they could buy
in this country.
The European sweetmeat dates back to the seventeenth century
aile time
with the discovery of sugar. During this period sweetmeats were an inte
gral part of the rich man's menu,. forming part of the meal, as is often
two 'Bubble gums' at I p each. The total outlay, 12p, could buy two
small chocolate bars, which are also available at the club . This may be
data tilat the total amount of money spent by a child on sweets at any
may be quite considerable .
an example of getting more for one's money, but another factor should
tioner's shop.
higher price range? Some years ago it was possible to purchase slim bars
of Cadbury's chocolate for one old penny and a slightly larger version
this sense the sweet, for adults, may be closer to the major
for twopence. The equivalent products today are tiny 'Milky Ways' and
aspects.
In
seU them singly? The answer seems to be that there is no demand for
them.
Children, then, do not buy 'kelS' simply because they are cheaper
or have a lower unit price. 'Kets' have other properties, besides their
may not be exploiting the power o f the child's purse directly, but more
II
A main
Junk Food
In order to resolve such problematic s
i sues concerning the attractions
298
Allison James
299
names 'Seafood', 'Shrimps' and 'Jelly Eels' may lead to the expecta
tion of a savoury sweet; they are, however, sweet and sickly. 'Rhubarb
and Custard' and 'Fruit SaJad' are hard, chewy 'kets' presenting a
marked contrast to the sloppy puddings implied by the names. Such
inversions and contradictions of the accepted adult order are an essen
tial facet o f the child's world so that 'Silly Toffee Banana' and 'Orozo
Hard Juice' could only be 'kets'.1
'Kets' are mostly brightly coloured, as in the luminous blues and
fluorescent oranges of the 'Fizz Bomb' and the vivid yellows and reds
of many jellied 'kets'. Some have contrasting stripes, with clashing
colours as in the 'uquorice Novelty'. Here, black strips of liquorice
are festooned with shocking greens, reds and blues. All these harsh,
saturated colours are absent from the 'real' food of the adult world.
Blue, especially, is banned; bright blue belongs to tlle realm of iced
cakes and such concoctions are a highly ceremonial fonn of food,
divorced from the everyday menu? Many sweets, also aimed at the
child's market but not classed here as kets' are similarly coloured:
for example, 'Smarties', 'Jelly Tots', 'Jelly Babies' and 'Liquorice
Allsorts'. Such bright and stimulating colours are not normally
associated with the dinner plate.
In contrast, the sweets whlch are aimed primarily at an adult market
have a more uniform and duller appearance. Most are coated in choco
late, presenting exteriors of shades of brown, significantly known today
as 'natural' - I.e. healthy - colours. In the more expensive boxes of
chocolates the highly saturated colours of the 'kets' are present, but
they are masked by a coating of chocolate and hidden from sight.
Where chocolate is not used, the colours of these sweets tend towards
pastel shades, soft, delicate colours inoffensive to the eye, as in
'Sugared Almonds' or 'Mints'. The 'Humbug', with its sedate black and
white stripes, is a poor relation of the 'Gob Stopper' and lacks its coat
of many colours. For sweets to be suitable for adult consumption,
highly saturated colours must be avoided, for such colours are not
present in 'real' food, and adults, unlike children , are conservative
about what they class as edible.
The eating of tltis metaphoric rubbish by children is a serious busi
ness and adults should be wary of tackling 'kets' for, unlike other
sweets, 'kets' are a unique digestive experience. Many of the names
given to 'kels' hint at this: 'Fizzy Bullets', 'Fizz Bombs', 'Fizz Balls',
'Festoon Fizzle Sticks', 'Fizzy Uzzies' and 'Fruit Fizzles' aU stress the
tingling sensation to be gained from eating them. Many 'kets' contain
sherbert and 'Sherbits', 'Refreshers', 'Sherbo Dabs', 'Dip Dabs', 'Sherbert
Fountains'. 'Double Dip Sherbert' and even 'Love Hearts' all make the
mouth smart while eating them.
In contrast other sweets provide little in the way of exciting con
'
300
Allison James
sumption. The nearest rival among these sweets to the explosive taSle
of many 'kets' is the 'Extra Strong Mint' - a poor rival 10 the
'Knock
Out Lolly'. The stress on citrus fruit flavours and the tangy, often
acrid, tasle of many 'kets' contrasts radically with the preponderance
30\
from the adult domestic sphere and belong to the public, social world
of children. In name, taste and consumptive experience, 'kets' belong
to the disorderly and inverted world of children, for in this alternative
world a new order exists which makes the 'ket' an eminently desirable
product.
a 'Fizz Bomb' is quite distinctive and lingers in the mouth for a long
in fact made
late, but have a gritty texture and are dry and tasteless. They lack the
it is in this light that the adult meaning of the word 'kets' becomes
highly significant. If sweets belong to the adult world, the human cul.
tural world o f cooked foods as opposed to the natural, raw food of the
animal kingdom, then 'kets' belong in a third category. Neither raw nor
cooked, according to the adult perspective, 'kets' are a kind of rOUen
food .
These
edible vegetable oil, citric acid and assorted flavourings. Other sweets,
'for making visible and stable the categories of culture' (1977, pp.
This marked difference in taste and texture between 'kels' and other
group. Children are, from the aduJt point of view, pre-social, in need of
training and correction through the process of socialization and thus it
finding cons.istent meanings' and that goods are purchased and needed
2923).
chocolate bar states in large letters that the bar contains : 'Milk choco
ing its nutritive properties and desirability - but stresses that there is a
minimum of 20 per cent milk solids which must not be overlooked.
Metaphoric Meals
late with peanuts, wafer, toffee and raisin centre'. In much smaller
print it admits that the chocolate contains vegetable fat - thus lessen
creams, coconut ice and toffee. 'Kets', on the other hand, are impos
Thus sweets belong to the realm o f 'real' food, to the private world
of the kitchen, and are bound to the concept or the meal. They have
names indicative of their wholesomeness; their flavours echo the
recall the whole by lhe struclUrc of the parts' which has insured tile
survival of the British biscuit in our diet and similarly it is this mimetic
quality of the sweet which has kept it bound to the realm of 'rea]' food
Mary Douglas (1975) argues that the eating of meals involves a whole
transfers food from plate to mouth. The use of the fingers for this act
is frowned upon by adults and rarely should foad enter the mouth by
the mouth can yet be felt to contaminate the hands should contact
'real' food must be similarly distanced from the body, unlike the non
302
are
separation between the inner and outer body. The phrase 'a hand to
Allison James
303
Egg is strictly ordered in both its construction and its consumption and
more packaging provided, the more ceremonial the sweet and the
necessity for maintaining this purity. As with the eating of meals, the
s
i shrouded in paper . Uke the eating of
external sources.
The 'After Eight Mint' is superlative
in
no respect for variety or flavour, into which children's hands delve and
rurrunage. Few 'kels' are individually wrapped and, if they are, the
They frequently share their sweets, offering each other bites or sucks of
a 'ket'o The absence of wrappers leaves the fmgers sticky; dirty hands
break off pieces to offer to friends. 'Kets'
are
along with other articles and 'Bubble Gum' is stuck to the underside
suggests that meals are externally ordered by time and that it is the
'After Eight Mint' confirms the suspicion that the eating of sweets by
'Kets' are not distanced from the body. Indeed, many are specific
the mouth by hand: 'Gob Stoppers' are removed from the mouth for
pulJed out of the mouth. Hands become covered in 'kef and the nor
Their tray shaped box and insulating containers recall the crockery
Stoppers'
After the meal has been eaten, the sweets may be passed round.
and cutlery of the meal and the hand is aUowed minimum contact
children, is to finger the sweets for, as with the meal, food must
scarcely be handled. To nibble a sweet and then 10 replace it in the
box, again common practice among children, is never allowed amongst
adults for that which has been in the mouth must ideally remain there.
Just as ceremonial meals have a yearly temporal cycle, so do the
sweet adverts
chocolates.
are
Indeed some 'kets' seem not to be designed for eating at aU: 'Cob
fill the mouth totaUy, not alJowing any of the normal diges
picked off piecemeal later. 'Lollipops' are pulled in and out of the
where it begins to explode while the mouth remains open and the ears
acceptable adult sweet and encapsulates the whole ethos of the adult's
conventions of adult society. The joy with wltich a dirty finger probes
frequently adorned with ribbon. Under the outer layers the chocolate
egg can be found, already separated into two, to avoid much contact
with the hand. It is easily pulled apart to reveal a packet of ltighly.
coloured sweets, such as 'Smarties' or 'Jelly Tots', which although
the mouth to extract a wine gum contrasts strongly with the need for
food while, for adults, sweelS are metonymic meals.4 'Kets' involve a
the meal and aTe regarded as rubbish by adults. Because they are
304-
Allison James
305
despised by the aduJt wond, they are prized by the child's and become
his world. 'Kets' deemed by the adult world to be rubbish, are under
Adults never buy them. The child's private funds, which are not con
(1974,
the literally inedible. Sawdust, plant leaves and other natural substan
Conclusion
ces are often consumed, but a particular favourite is the game called
'Fag-Chewing'. A cigarette is passed round with each child taking a
has
draw until all the tobacco is gone. The unfortunate person left with the
force confrontations with the adult order, for 'kets' have been despised
'Kets', therefore, are the child's food, the food over which he
s
i attached to 'kets' is emphasised by the
ridicule and disgust expressed by the child towards adult food, which
is food over which children have little control.
Children are highly articulate in their views on food and school
lunches come in for high contempt. The authoritarian structure of the
school frequently denies any self-expression by the child so it is signifi
cant that it is school dinners which are most abused. Mashed potatoes
are known as 'Mashy Arty' or 'shit' when too salty . Mushy peas
are
has
s
i like 'frogspawn'. Thus the foods
which children are forced to put inside their bodies by adults are given
the status of the excretions which pass out. The most graphic statement
of all goes as follows:
Yellow belly custard, green snol pie,
Mix them up with a dead dog's eye.
Mix it thin, mix it thkk,
filter is then made to eat it or, at the very least, 10 chewit. Such activity
hood, where one child was ostracised until the others discovered that he
could eat worms.
This ability to consume metaphoric rubbish is an integral part of the
child's culture. Children, by the very nature of their position as a group
For children 'kets' are an important vehicle for defining the self. As I
have suggested elsewhere (James, 1979) regarding names, adult labels
for children are destroyed and a new name - a nickname - is created
by children out of the remnants. Similarly the adult, ordered concep
tion of food is thrown into disarray by the child. Adults continually
urge their offspring to eat up their food and lament that they are 'fussy
eaters', but children are only pernickety in adult terms. Indeed children
stulT into their mouths a wide variety of substances; it is just that these
are abhorred by adults.
The eating of 'kets' thus represents a metaphoric chewing up of
306
AlJison James
adult order. Food be1onS$ to the adult world and is symbolic of the
adult's control over children. By disordering and confusing the concep
tual categories of the adult world children erect a new boundary over
which adults have no authority. Mary Douglas (1966) has argued that a
Notes
I . The eating of such disordet"ed food is consistent with the child's culture,
but adults abhor such anomalies. On sweet wrappers and other foodstuffs there is
a guarantee issued which states that: 'Thls product should reach you in perfect
oondition, If it docs not, please return it' ('Twix' wrapper). 'Kels', on the other
hand, olTer no such guarantee,
2. It is important to note that bright, artificial colours do appear in 'real'
food but such foods are also classcd as 'junk:'. Many instant products e.g. Angel
Delight and cake mies - have extremcJy bright coloun. Bright colours appear
oflen in food at chlldren's parties - e.g. jellies. blancmange and cakes. Such food,
like 'ket, is also regarded as being detrimental and essentiaUy rubbishy.
3. There is a smaller, less ceremonial Easter Egg on the market which seems to
be aimed at the child market. 11 has tome'ketty' qualities, for the cream nIled
egg, although appearing to contain albumen and yolk, is extremely sweet to eat,
and far removed from the laste associated with fried eggs, wltich it closely resem
bles.
4. Advert5 for sweets for ildults fuIly substantiate this idea and the eating of
sweets for adults is portrayed as (1) helping to achieve a desired end - e.g. a
'Flake' gives a girl the world of motor boat5 and a 'Bounty' provides 'the taste
of paradisc'; (2) substitute food - e.g. 'A Mars a Day hclps you work rest and
play'; or (3) an additional, nourishing extra which will not affect normal food
intake e.g. 'A Milky Way is the sweet you can eat between mcalswithout
ruining your appetite.' 'Kets' are rarely advertised but one adv for a 'Fizz
Bomb' shows cartoon chidren, with their eyeballs whizzing round in opposite
directions. Far from stressing the utilitarian aspect5 of eating swoct5 - whether as
a source of physical or mental strength 'kets' are to bc recommended as an
unforgettable gastronomic experience.
_
References
Boyle, J. (1977) A Sellse a/freedom, I'an, London
Bulmer, R. (1967) 'Why the Cassowary is Not a Bird', Mall, n.s. 2 (I), 5-25.
Dobson_ S. (l974)A GeQl'die Dictionary, FIank Gr.iham, Newcastle
l>Ouglas., M. (1966) Purity and Dallger, RouUedgc aJld Kegan Paul. London
.
307
T. Shippey
15
309
Science Fiction
T. Shippey
Source:
(Longman, London,
for a different career. Many novels and stories wouJd no doubt have
come out different. StUl, they would have come out. In the face of the
millions of words published by scores of magazines and thousands of
authors between 1926 and now, one is forced to conclude that even
individuals at the centre of the field cannot have exerted more than a
faelS arc related: the charge that 'fans' get from science fiction is one of
irresponsibility. freedom from restrictions. 'The trouble with these here
neurotics is that they all the time got to fight reality. Show in the next
011
Shadow
the Hearth
finally realizes that her little girl's illness comes from her deadly cuddly
enough, and easily forgivable, among the fans themselves, but too often
reflected back at them by fanspokesmen venturing into criticism, and
by professional critics who should know better.
It is the distinguishing mark of this second critical style to confuse
chronology with history and personalities with explanations. Thus, it is
Oller',
toy, left out overnight in the radioactive rain. The new phenomenon of
not win):
C.M. Kornbluth's
Awards' for the year's best novel, short story, magazine, etc. are called
anned satellite) the other side's fleets and bombs and annoured divi
in achieving it, not exploiting it. Wars are now infonnation wars, they
All histories of the genre contain some reference to him; the 'Hugo
after him; comment on him approaches the hagiographical. Yet in one
sense Gemsbackian priority was an accident. He himself might easily
(1955, retitled
Olris/mQs Ellf! in
all
these varieties of 'hot war' might be missing something out. For one of
_
Wilh
Stral/ge Device
age, the deadliest strike one can make against a foe is to deprive him o f
his brains, whether or not one acquires them oneself.'
310
i unrecogniz
obligingly whisks him off to hospital. What they return s
able, a man half-metal. Is it Martino, or a Soviet agent trained to imper
sonate him? If the latter, then Martino is the other side of the wire, and
the K-88 may tum out Soviet. One of these days, muses the American
Security Chief at the start, his opposite number is going to outwit him
critically, 'and everybody's kids'U talk Chinese'. One 'brain' (in this
scenario) can outweigh the efforts of the rest of the world. But ever
since Korea it had been accepted that everybody cracked, that 'brain
washing' was as certain as a surgical operation - see the Oxford English
Dictionary entry under 'brainwash' in the Supplement of 1972, and
further Frederik PoW and C.M. Kornbluth's story 'The Quaker Cannon'
from ASF (Dec. 1961 (B.)). Finding out who the metal man is thus
becomes very much a fulcrum of destiny. But of course he himself does
not see things this way. While Who? is in one way a story about techno-
T. Shippey
311
312
T. Shippey
313
shown !.here was no need of a security leak to tell people about U235
e io - if tedescllillo'
tion. His pJuase of selfintroduction - 'Barbara
becomes a personal analogue of the K-88, forever beyond explana.
and critical mass. So you could not keep 'secrets' this side of the Iron
again: 'There are only two kinds of men in all the world who still
tlley
average men and normal politics to come to terms with the technology
believe there are keepable secrets in modem scien ! One of those men
jealous researcher . . . Realistic secrecy in modern science is a farce.'
The new exemplar of the clown, one might add, is the security agent
trying to censor references to data which can be revealed by experi
.
ment.
There is no doubt here that science fiction was correct, nor that it
was oppOsing a powerful orthodoxy. J. Robert Oppenheimer ('the
father of the atomic bomb') hac! said 'you cannot keep the nature of
the world a secret', and Eisenhower in 1945 had agreed with him,
suggesting that the USA should make a virtue of necessity and share
nuclear information, so aborting the anns race. But both were readily
outvoted. By November 1945 the US had decided not to share nuclear
technology with Britain and Canada, who had helped to develop it.
Because it was thought that this decision settled matters many politi
Intelligence on
Astoullding
the G..ffian and the genius are now yin and yang, growing out of each
which sciencefiction authors were attracted during the 1950s was that
of inner treason: the obligation to resist at once the Federal govern
ment and constitutional processes.
Stealers
in a case seen
or about that date 'the President set up the National Defense Research
Committee; both the Manhattan District and our organization grew out
i
of that'. What 'our organization' is never appears clearly, but Tucker s
thinking of such events as the creation of the CIA in July 1947, the Bill
for FBI investigation of Atomic Energy Commission applicants in
August 1949, the ban on sending technical publications to the Soviet
bloc in March the same year, and a series of other moves in the direc
security was there before Senator McCarthy, and went straight back to
the unpredictability-trauma of 1945. Its development showed once
more !.he split between those who' felt' science was still a human endea
vour and those who saw it as a djinn to be stuffed back in the bottle. As
McCarthyism advanced, science fiction became increasingly angry and
sarcastic.
One can, for instance, tum over the pages of Astounding during the
worst of the arrns-race years and see one story after another about
security: 'Security Risk', by Poul Anderson (May 1957 (B. , 'Security',
by Ernest M . Kenyon (Mar. 1956 (B.n, 'A Matter of Security', by W.T.
Haggert (July 1957 (B. . Others present the theme under less obvious
titles. In Poul Anderson's 'Sam HaU' (Aug. 1953), the Major
tion of tight control over atomic power. All this was highly illiberal.
But the complaint voiced by Tucker and other science.fiction writers
was that it was unrealistic, too. They knew that whatever its etymology
'science' was not the same as 'knowledge'; the 'Deadline' affair had
of Central Records in
in charge
n
i the Fourth
314
T.
Shippey
315
World War leading to world domination. The Major himself has a rela
The fic ion comes to life (not in any supernatural sense) and cannot be
caught because Security itself breeds rebel and ra.i.tors - as it has done
with the Major. The point of the story lS agam the self-fulftlment of
.
fear. Analogous or complementary points are made by the other slo.nes
isted.
l
They insist that the United States has no moral or natural nght
tems are the delusions o f people who had not understood the nature of
scientific discovery before 1945, and had learnt nothing since. Science
is a tool, not a (dammable) reservoir of knowledge.
.
Following on thls, or overlapping with it, came a further pomt abot
. IS
the nature of discovery: if science is not the same as knowledge, It
also not to be identified with truth. To put it another way, science does
not progress additively any more than discovery works by induction.
To advance one has to discard. The true obstacle to development may
'
then be that what needs discarding is deeply integrated in personalities
and academic systems, too familiar to b e challenged. In this view, the
intellectual. equivalents to security chiefs may well be nior research
ers
_ both groups are committed to the status quo which has brought
F.
while his c Ueagues try to get him security clearance to attend the vital
conference to wh.ich he has been summoned (. . . 1 by the Office of
National Research to infonn senior physicists that antigravity has been
discovered and demonstrated ; there
are
1?
sented by Nagle, has accepted Ihe real-life data offered and concluded
that since antigravity is ruled out by the state of scientific knowledge,
Dykstra of MIT insists that the whole thing - and especially the stuff
himself when his premises become untenable. The irony is that Dr
Dykstra is in a practical sense right. The whole thing has been a fraud,
concocted by the Office of National Research, its mainspring being the
notion that invention is checked not by ignorance but b y prior assump
tions (1962),
thesis of Thomas
probably ineducable. They had a point, in the 1950s. But they took it
too far.
A betterjudged example of the same reaction can b e seen in James
Blish's
316
T.
Shippey
317
the Cold War could be fought and lost. It took courage to offer such a
picture of America in the mid1950s, when the Korean War was over,
the Vietnamese one not yet on, and when the Strategic
Air Command
still held more than the baJance of power. Even more daring, though,
affair, 'as " the left-wing triple-A-S" '_ The speakers' discussion dovetaUs
Year 2018!, however, shows one of them shaking off the glamour of
nuclear power and the Manhattan Project while the rest of America was
neatly into a joint politico-6cientific opinion: the USSR has won the
Cold War (this is Wagoner, by the end of the book), and it has done so
because 'scientific method doesn't work any more' (Corsi, at the start).
As another quasi-true statement this aphorism is particularly provoca
before.
natural law, argues Blish/Corsi, only 'a way of sifting evidence', a new
kind of syllogism. The reasons it need not work in the twenty-first
All the stories discussed so far have their roots in a critique of the rela
tionship between science and society. The latter either cannot control
the fonner (as in 'Solution Unsatisfactory'), or else breaks it in the
century are, first the control of technical infonnation, and second the
low quality of those drawn to government research (familiar notions in
science fiction, as has been said), but third, the nature of the facts
entirely without prophetic force, as one can see from the NASA experi
ence) means that Manhattan District Projects will have to stop. It is the
crackpot ideas that must be winnowed now, the rejected hypotheses,
the notions that are not senseless but out of style. The rebellions that
Wagoner
and
Coni lead
are
against
scientific
method
and the
society
than the latter liked to admit. In science fiction this last notion
reached the point when it's time for the steam-engine to be invented',
lectures a character from Raymond F. Jones's 'The School' (ASF,
generator' or 'spindizzy' and the 'anti-agathic drug>' which halt old age;
the two between them make interstellar flight a possibility. They also
is.'
lead to disaster within the world of the novel. The impact of anti
agathics will destroy the West, and the Soviets only marginally later.
The fact that such initiatives have been concealed will give power to
MacHinery and his associates, whose suspicions Oike Dr Dykstra's) will
for once tum out to be true. Both originators of the new initiative will
die by torture, Dr Corsi without knowing what he has brought to life,
and Wagoner by the standard treason-penaity of m
i mersion in the
waste-dump of a radioactive pile. 'It's a phony terror', says Wagoner .
'Pile wastes are quick chemical poisons; you don't last long enough to
notice that they're aJso hol.' Still, the macabre vindictiveness of the
notion offers a finaJ opinion on the 'decline of the West' that Blish
foresees, on the long-term effects of victory at Hiroshima, on the way
one at the end of Harry Harrison's III Our Hands, tile Stars (ASF
serial, Dec. 1969-Feb. 1970); but he says it sadly, because the deadly
and plausible image of science as one man's secret has led the security
agents of many nations (the US and Israel prominent among them) to
join in a multiple fatal hijacking of the new spaceliner built by
318
T Shippey
Denmark and employing the 'Oaleth Effect'. The irony is that the
secret was no secret all along. The discoverer's data were freely avail
able. Once other scientists had the clues of knowing what had been
done and who had done it, they could duplicate his work and even
make his 'Effect' commercial; they were about to do the latter just as
the hijack started. 'Steamboat time' means that the deaths were
all
319
and then, when h e comes o n the 'kidnapped' girl, shoots her dead. Her
mind was projecting alien gabble; her body had been taken over by a
parasite-organism from space. The rest of the story is devoted, very
naturally, to fighting off the invasion . Yet it is, queerly, almost comic
in tone, marked by the habitual irreverence of its hero, Wade Harper.
pointless. And this is not just a fantasy, Harrison insists (via his charac
especially for a telepath? The story itself insists that it is not. DUring
in
the first few pages, for instance, we keep hearing, over the radio, of
the apparently unrelated battle going on between the US government
all,
this way during the Second World War; and as Wilson Thcker had
this question are visible in 1950s science fiction. [. . . 1 The many social
analogously as a man under threat, one who will (from his job as a
delusive that they channel rebellion just as much as they channel inno
and will become it even sooner if they know he can read minds! The
vation. The heroes of Frederik PoW and CoM. Kornbluth's The Space
Merchallts (1953, originally serialized in Galaxy as 'Gravy Planet',
Venusian emergency makes him declare himself, but nothing less would
1952) and of Kurt Vonnegut's Player Piano (1952) both start as agents
of the system, and have to be virtuany excommunicated from it before
they can think of going into opposition. Deep in the core of the fanner
have. And
outset. The odds were against it, they were even more against Harper
as private citizen being able to undo the effects of (say) Soviet telepa
Russell suppresses
duced. But next time that something like the A-bomb came up, where
underlies the Harry Harrison novel just mentioned; and also, more
wish to shut it out or deny its existence rather than make it a part of
one's world.
( . . .J
to stay.
The 'in biding' theme rei;jtes closely to the 'noise level' one and that
ing' in his mind the dying call of a shot policeman. He goes to help,
Security. They
Him Dead,
all
320
T. Shippey
321
she clisagrees, and has the final word. To translate back into real-life
are not fit to be trusted with new powers (whether nuclear or tele
ASF (Nov.
1948),
this
. .1
However, the most thorough development of the theme - the book is
Wilson Tucker's
Odd John
lVild Talent,
serialized in
New WOTld9
(Aug.-Oct.
frame, for discussion of many real issues which were hardly open to
nature of science, the conflict of business and government, the limits
of loyalty, the power of social norms to affect individual perception.
It is
else;
this which science-fiction fans felt they could not get anywhere
this which accounts for the horde of 'willing followers' shoving
displays
he is pursuing. But Breen, unlike Harper, is still onJy a boy, still 'in
his fingerprints checked against the FBI's nIes with the massive, routine
penetrated, he too becomes 'federal property'. But they don't like him.
If 'brains' are valuable but potentially treacherous, 'brain-readers' are
mOTes
'dating', and so on. 'We can't come here again' , he says regretfully to
his telepath fiancee at the end, as they wait for the escape boat. But
was
not
motifs. It would be a mistake, though, to think that even these did not
contain a high proportion of serious thought, with a reference to real
life not beyond recovery. Even more than most literature, science
fiction shows a strong conventional quality which makes its signs and
symbols interpretable only through familiarity; to instance only matters
322
Note
\,),
badger-baiting 25-6, 36
61..5 passim
Cato Street Conspirators 50, 5 1
Chaplin, Charles 115
Chapman, Herbert 236
Charity Organization SOtlcty 96, 97,
98-9
Charlton, Bobby 222, 223
Chester Report 226-7, 232, 233
Christian Observer 39
Churchill, W. 1 l 4
CinemaServicc 151
Cinematograph Act, 1927 153, 154..5
Clarendon, Lord 164
Clarke, R.T. 175
dass, nature of 1617
Coatman, John 175
Cobbett, William 53, 54, 51,59,
60,63,65
oodcitghting 20, 26, 21, 36, 70
oock, throwing at 21
Combination
Combination Acts 41
323
Index
324 Index
Deutsch, Oscar 151
Diclc:ens,Challes 53, 70, 96
dogfJghting 256
Doherty, John 52, 53, 61
Douglas, Mary 2956, 300, 301, 302
Drakard, John 3 7
Dunning, Thomas 523
EagJe Tavern 66, 1 1 3
Eating Studios 159, 2 1 1
Earl, Uarvey J. 208
Eaton, Dankl Jsaac 57
education 479, 5 1 ; ue also [allow
ng
i enny and literacy, schools
Education Act, 1870 100, 106
Egan, Pierce 66, 75
Eldon, Lord 56, 59
Eliot, T.S. 198
Ellcnborough, L.J.C. 55
I!.'ra 108
Escott, T.II. 108
fairs 15, 30, 32, 33..5 panim, 99
Fielding, Hcruy 39
f"Ilms and fIlmmaking 14660
Fleming, Ian: characters and values
245..53; ideology of 25962;
mUrative structure in 24262;
plots as game 253--9; works of:
Cafino Royale 2424, 246,
Dil1mondsare Forever 244, 246,
251, 255, DrNo 244, 246,
248,252, 255, Fn>m Russia with
Love 244, 2467, 250,255,260,
Goldfinger 244, 248, 251, 255,
Live and Let Ole 244, 246,Man
with the Golden Gun 243, 246,
Moonraker 244, 246, 251, 254,
On Her Majesty:t Seuet Service
244, 248, 251, 255, Tile Spy who
Loved Me 244, Thunderball
244,246,248,2501, You Only
Live Twice 244, 248, 251
food 295, 300, 3015 passim
football 79.aO, 107: clubs 2315;
intcrnational influence on 235-9
pasfim ; opposition to 2831;
players 2206; supportcrs 2263 1 ;
tactics 2359 passim ; USA's
intercst in 23940
Football Auociation 79, 236, 240
Football League 220, 221, 240
fo;>; hunting 369 passim, 834
Frost, Thomas 67
time in 277-8
Jcrrold, Blanchard 76, 85
Jones, Raymond F. 314-15, 317
Kean, Charles 67
Kean, Edmund 67
325
..
326 Index
seaside resorlsSS, 13)4
ScLtnick, David O. 158
ShapleY, Olive 184
Sheldrake, William 33
Shinls, Wilmar H. 320
Knowledge S3,64
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty
to Animals 24, 26, 36, 37, 38
Society for the Promotion of Christian
Knowledge 53
Society fOI the Suppn:ssion of
Vice )4, 41
Somerville, William 32
Southey, Robert 556
Spershott, James 21
Sportillg Magazine 23
Stanley. Frederick 113
Stapledon, Olaf 320
streamlining 20411
Strutt, Joseph 2 J. 23, 84
Sunday observance 135,143
Sunday Trading Bill 100
Swann, Joseph 62)
sweels 294, 296-7. 298, 299)0)
passim; SCC Q/so 'keU'
Sykes Commission 162
Ta1IenlS, Stephen 175
taxes on knowledge 52, 53, 54, 60
temperance 101
Tennyson, Pcn 159
Thompson, Edward 16-17, 86-1
thrift 101-2
Tidd, Richard S 1
Tilley, Vesta 113
Times, The 59, 60, 92
trade unions 47, S l . I17
Tucker, Wilson 309, 312, 3D, 318,
3201
Ullswatcr Cornrnittee 173
United Artists l S I
urbanil;ation IS16, 28, 3S
wakes 32-3, 34
Watson, James S8-9, 60
Waugh, Evelyn 19S..s, 199, 217
Webster, Benjamin 82
Wells, H.G.: 'Crystal Egg' 122;
F
irsl Men in the Moon 122, 124,
127-8;Foodoflhe Gods 130;
'In the Abyss' 124; Inisible Man
123, 127;/slllnd ofDrMoreou
1267, 129;Mon Who Could Work
M
iracles 148;Men Like Gods 131,
Modem Utopia 130,New Accelera
'
lor 122; Remtukoble Cou of
Davidson 'r Eye! 122;SeQ Roiden
124; Shope of Things to Come
130; Things to Come 147; Time
Mochille 123, 124-6, 129; 1II0r
ofthe Worlds 122,123, 126, 127,
129; IIIhen the Sleeper Awakes
130
Wilcox, Herbert 156-7
Wilkes, John 55
William III, King 20
Williams, Rayrnond 17,87, 88, 167,
198
Wilion,James51
Windham, Wiliam 24, 36-7, 69
Winterbottorn, Walter 235
Worki
ng Men's Friend 61
'Zetetic Societies' 59