Teddy Boys
Post-War Britain and the First Youth Revolution: A Sunday Times Book of the Week
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Profile Books Ltd
Published:25th Jan '24
£25.00
Available for immediate dispatch.
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£12.99(9781846689796)
This book explores Britain's first youth counterculture through the Teddy Boys, highlighting their distinctive fashion and social impact in the 1950s, set against the backdrop of post-war society.
Teddy Boys delves into the emergence of Britain's first youth counterculture, exploring the unique style and identity of the Teddy Boys. With their signature draped suits, suede creepers, and perfectly styled hair, the Teds represented a significant shift for teenagers who had previously faced a monotonous existence marked by drab clothing and post-war hardships. This book captures the essence of a generation that sought to express itself through fashion and attitude, breaking free from the constraints of their upbringing.
The narrative traces the origins of Teddy Boy fashion back to Edwardian influences, while also addressing societal concerns about delinquency and disorder that accompanied this youth movement. Set against the backdrop of a nation still recovering from the Second World War, the Teds carved out a space for themselves, asserting their presence on the streets and in popular culture. The book highlights how these working-class teenagers used their appearance and behavior as a means of defiance, prompting reactions from the public that often ranged from admiration to fear.
Author Max Décharné skillfully chronicles the rise of the Teddy Boys, linking their story to broader cultural phenomena such as the advent of rock 'n' roll and significant events like the Notting Hill race riots. Through rich insights and engaging anecdotes, Teddy Boys not only celebrates the founding figures of British youth culture but also provides a compelling look at the social dynamics of the time, making it a valuable read for anyone interested in the evolution of youth identity.
[An] enormously enjoyable history of the Teddy boys ... plenty of historians have mentioned them in passing, but none has ever investigated them with Décharné's enthusiasm and attention to detail -- Dominic Sandbrook, 'Book of the Week' * Sunday Times *
In his genial and entertaining Teddy Boys, rock journalist Max Décharné takes a calm look at the phenomenon and strips away the myths that coloured it * Daily Telegraph *
Excellent ... Décharné's book is a loving reclamation of an important youth type ... Most of all, in focusing on the late Forties and early Fifties, Teddy Boys illuminates a fascinating and still under-explored period in British youth culture and social history. -- Jon Savage, 'Book of the Day' * New Statesman *
Max Décharné's book delves into the vanished world of the 1950s Ted just before it slips from living memory, presenting contemporaneous reports and eyewitness accounts with empathy and enthusiasm * Financial Times *
Taking in everything from the birth of rock 'n' roll to the Notting Hill riots, [Teddy Boys] takes us back to an era when working-class teenagers first began to assert themselves in the UK ... Décharné's cultural history offers a fresh take on one of the most maligned youth cultures in 20th-century British history * Herald *
Enjoyable ... diligently researched ... a powerful, almost poignant, story * Englesberg Ideas *
Expert research, insider knowledge and a love for the subject all make for a thumping good read * Classic Rock *
A persuasively detailed chronicle of an entire country ... an engrossing read, meticulously researched * Record Collector *
**** [A] rise-and-fall chronicle of the New Edwardians, from the early-'50s cosh boys to the Notting Hill Riots of 1958 ... offers repeated riches in its lovingly curated assemblage of news articles and interviews that reveal how this working-class cultural revolution was reinterpreted, co-opted and demonised * Mojo *
A joyous celebration of the founding fathers of British youth culture, and a great slice of social and cultural history -- Alwyn Turner
Reclaiming a youth cult that from the very outset was besmirched by the gutter press of Fleet Street and continues to be associated more with thuggish behaviour than peacockish dandyism, Max Decharne traces the rise and fall of a peculiarly English street-wise style that found a soundtrack in American rock 'n' roll and that lit up the grey, bomb damaged streets and sedate dance halls of post-war Britain in truly glorious fashion -- Travis Elborough
Praise for Max Décharné -- :
Décharné writes attentively and with authority about the ping-ponging of scenester phrases between genres, and from closed circles of cognoscenti to the wider world * TLS *
Décharné, a musician and songwriter, has written extensively on music, crime and noir, and his great gift is to connect his encyclopaedic knowledge of more recent slang to that of the past. His mind is a trivia-trap of the first order * New York Times *
The strength of Mr. Décharné's account is its zest ... he has an infectious enthusiasm for the peculiarities of English vocabulary * Wall Street Journal *
ISBN: 9781846689789
Dimensions: 236mm x 160mm x 38mm
Weight: 554g
336 pages
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