The University of Sheffield
Department of History

HST3095/3096: Permissive Britain? Social and Cultural Change, 1956-74

40 credits (semesters 1 and 2)


Module Leader: Dr. Adrian Bingham

Pre-requisites

A pass in at least two history modules at level two.

Module Summary

This module explores British society and culture as the nation moved from an era of austerity and rationing to one of unprecedented affluence. This was a period of intellectual ferment when traditions and authorities were challenged, personal morality was re-evaluated, and new freedoms were claimed. The transition to a more individualistic, pluralistic and multicultural society caused considerable debate and disquiet. Key topics to be studied include the impact of affluence and consumerism on class and gender relationships; the emergence of a national youth culture based around music and fashion; changes and continuities in sexual behaviour in the wake of the introduction of the contraceptive pill; the increasingly heated debates about immigration and race. Students will assess the significance of the reforming legislation that relaxed the censorship regime, decriminalised homosexuality, enabled easier access to abortion, liberalised the divorce system and abolished capital punishment. They will examine the arguments of those who championed, and those who resisted, 'permissiveness'.

Teaching

The module is taught through twice-weekly seminars. These seminars will focus on the discussion of primary material, including sociological surveys, government reports, memoirs, diaries, court transcripts, newspaper and magazine articles, novels, plays, films, television broadcasts and music.
Seminars
Post-war Britain
Affluence and consumerism
Suez, satire and the `state of the nation´
Morality and the law: the Wolfenden Report
Obscenity and censorship: the Lady Chatterley trial
Youth culture, pop music and the media
The pill and sexual mores
Immigration and national identity
Education and social mobility
Poverty, welfare and housing
Religion, secularization and moral protest
Crime, punishment and the abolition of the death penalty
Permissive legislation? Homosexuality, abortion, divorce
Challenging authority: counter-culture and student protest
Feminism and gay rights
Powell, racism and nationalism
Backlash? The right and the response to `permissiveness´
Industrial relations and the trade union movement
Turbulent Seventies: political conflict and economic crisis
Myths, memories and legacies of the Sixties


Selected Reading


Intended Learning Outcomes

By the end of the unit, a candidate will be able to demonstrate: