British Popular Culture in the Early 1960s In this article I will explain the main features of British popular culture in the early 1960s. From the late 1940s to the 1950s life was monotonous, unified and suppressed. Because of World War II, people's living standards were generally low. This is officially called austerity. In the meantime, some people were also called "angry young people". These people complain about society and make no specific suggestions on how to improve things.
Despite these wonderful changes, some people are not satisfied with the popular culture of the 1960s. The British opponent, Mary White House, opposed to "a forgiving society" and "the founder of the British ladies clean TV movement" was inspired by her traditional Christian faith. Source D shows a part of the article of Daily Mail in 1964, where "the author strongly opposed the belief in established Christianity, wrote works that inspire goals and hopes, and their work I found it very difficult to accept "." Further explanation that "BBC became necessary for embedded review of the goodness and cleanliness of our country's culture"
The UK in the 1950s was dull and announced Cain, but before all their brilliant self-satisfaction could not all generations talk about their own era? Since the 1960s there has been no doubt that opportunities to create major changes in youth culture and some white worker classes have been opened and they are no longer submitting reforms aimed at eliminating roughness Absent. In one more convincing anecdote, Cain talks about seducing his groundbreaking role, "Zulu", and if the director Cy Endfield is British, not American, Kane Of the working class of the London accent will be eliminated. Whatever you want to be a senior executive. This is a fact that can not be denied.
Pop art appeared in the United States and the United Kingdom in the mid 1950's, and culminated in the art movement from 1960 to 1965. Pop art is the result of the postwar era, the mass production and the sudden influx of mass culture. Pop art includes images of popular culture such as consumer goods, magazines, advertisements, etc., rather than a more serious elite culture art like abstract expressionism. It is used as a bridge between contemporary life and art, often using trends using images and things discovered, mechanical rendering and production techniques.