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by David Fowler
"The first generation of British teenagers - young people eager to spend a significant proportion of their wages on consumer goods and services such as cosmetics, clothes, magazines, records, motor cycles, cinemas and dance halls - is generally regarded as that of the 1950s and 1960s. The same group, sociologists and economic and social historians have claimed, was the first to enjoy autonomy in the labour market and to experience low unemployment. This study argues convincingly that in fact a teenage culture in the modern sense already existed in the period between the two world wars."--BOOK JACKET. "The first systematic analysis of the lives of young workers of the period, the book provides a revisionist interpretation of an era still widely regarded as one of exploitation of young people in dead-end jobs, of high youth unemployment, low disposable incomes and restricted leisure activities tailored to suit adult interests.^ The era remembered for the Depression, the means test, the h
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Roald Dahl
N.W. MARTIN