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Class composition: John Axon, cultural debate and the British left

Harker, B

Authors

B Harker



Abstract

This article presents influential BBC documentary radio programme The Ballad of John Axon (1958) as a text which refracts, recodes and intervenes into anxious debates within the late 1950s British left about shifting class formations, working-class investment in consumer capitalism and the attempt to formulate an appropriate cultural strategy. It contextualises the programme with reference to the writing of New Left intellectuals Raymond Williams and Richard Hoggart; it also reads the programme as a critical response to the hesitant cultural policies of the post 1956 Communist Party. It argues that in complex ways the radio programme’s nostalgic construction of contemporary reality is generated by an impetus to contain late 1950s economic, social and political shifts within the framework of older and now contested modes of political analysis and organisation.

Citation

Harker, B. Class composition: John Axon, cultural debate and the British left. Science and Society, 73(3), 340-356

Journal Article Type Article
Deposit Date Nov 26, 2010
Journal Science & Society: A Journal of Marxist Thought and Analysis
Print ISSN 0036-8237
Publisher Guilford Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 73
Issue 3
Pages 340-356
Publisher URL http://www.guilford.com/cgi-bin/cartscript.cgi?page=pr/jnss.htm&dir=periodicals/per_soc&cart_id=177679.5588