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Let’S Spend the Night Together: Sex, Pop Music and British Youth Culture, 1950s–80s

  • Editor: Worley, Matthew

Book

$134.00

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Contents

  • Introduction: Let’s spend the night together: sex, pop music and British youth culture, 1950s–80s
  • Matthew Worley, Keith Gildart, Anna Gough-Yates, Sian Lincoln, Bill Osgerby, Lucy Robinson, John Street, Pete Webb
  • 1. Where were you? UK chart pop and the commodification of the teenage libido, 1952–63
  • Tom Hennessy
  • 2. The Jerry Lee Lewis scandal, the popular press and the moral standing of rock ‘n’ roll in late 1950s Britain
  • Gillian A.M. Mitchell
  • 3. ‘I’m different; I’m tough; I fuck’: attitudes towards young men, sex and masculinity
  • in Nik Cohn’s Awopbopaloobop alopbamboom: pop from the beginning (1969)Patrick Glen
  • 4. ‘We are no longer certain, any of us, what is “right” and what is “wrong”’: Honey, Petticoat, and the construction of young women’s sexuality in 1960s Britain
  • Sarah Kenny
  • 5. Lovers’ lanes and haystacks: rural spaces, girls’ experiences of courtship and sexual intimacy in post-war England
  • Sian Edwards
  • 6. Queering modernism: social, sartorial and spatial intersections between mod and gay (sub-) culture, 1957–67
  • Shaun Cole and Paul Sweetman
  • 7. ‘You just let your hair down’: lesbian parties and clubs in the 1960s and early 1970s
  • Alison Oram
  • 8. Singing Elton’s song: queer sexualities and youth cultures in England and Wales, 1967–85
  • Daryl Leeworthy
  • 9. ‘Nothing like a little disaster for sorting things out’: Blowup (1966) and the free hedonism(s) of Swinging London
  • Marlie Centawer
  • 10. ‘Everything gets boring after a time’: Deep End and swinging sex
  • David Wilkinson
  • 11. Run the track, but no bother chat slack: overstanding the relationship between slackness and culture within the reggae dancehall, 1960s–80s
  • William ‘Lez’ Henry
  • 12. ‘This could be a night to remember’: authenticity, historicising and the silencing of sexual experience in the northern soul scene
  • Sarah Raine and Caitlin Shentall
  • 13. ‘Mummy … what is a Sex Pistol?’: SEX, sex and British punk in the 1970s
  • Matthew Worley
  • 14. The ‘style terrorism’ of Siouxsie Sioux: femininity, early goth aesthetics and BDSM fashion
  • Claire Nally
  • 15. Coming of age Asian and Muslim in post-punk West Yorkshire
  • Nabeel Zuberi
  • 16. ‘I’m your man’: heartthrobs and banter in Smash Hits
  • Hannah Charnock