Articles related to "Angry Young Men"A brief biography of English novelist Kinsgley Amis who belonged to a group of British writers known as the "Angry Young Men."
Defiantly in favour of jazz, beer and pulling faces, the hero of "Lucky Jim" struggles through 1950s Britain in a rage at the pretension around him.
Richardson's hard-hitting 1959 screen version of Osbourne's infamous play signaled the beginning of social realism and the angry young man in British film.
Director Karel Reisz's Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, the classic story of an angry young man, heralded a new kind of cinema for British audiences.
Social realism has brought true greats of the British film industry such as Mike Leigh and Ken Loach to the fore, and as a genre it is hugely influential on modern cinema
Adam "Pac-man" Jones has proven once again that he has been given one too many chances to resurrect his career.
Nigel Molesworth, hero of the hilarious series by Geoffrey Willans and Ronald Searle, is everything a schoolboy shouldn't be - irreverent, cynical, mordant and amoral.
In her novel, Miriam Toews creates characters who deal with mental illness, teenage angst and parenting as they drive across America in search of a family member.
The beginning of the 2008-2009 football season marked the birth of the FA's 'Respect Programme,' an initiative to improve behaviour towards Match Officials.
Do you want to improve your creative writing? Do you struggle with how to write speech? Follow these five rules, and your dialogue writing will improve!
Clowns, fools, jerks, stupid girls and even the Major of Simpleton are celebrated in the most popular pop songs for April Fools' Day gag theme music and ringtones.
The Catcher in the Rye has been called many things since it was first published -- vulgar and immoral among them -- even though it explores a few important themes.
Students' issues are rooted in three commonly believed myths: choices are without consequences, youth have no value, and they have no power to change their circumstances.
|