Over the kitchen table: British storytelling as working-class art, belonging and resistance
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03_JCLC_3_2_art_McKenzie.pdf
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2025-12-18
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author's accepted version
Issue Date
2024-12-18Subjects
sociologyethnography
film
inequality
community engagement
media
culture
Subject Categories::P300 Media studies
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This article introduces a contemporary art and storytelling project that took place in January 2024 in Bestwood Village, an ex-coal community, showing a televised play filmed in the village (1963) written by Dennis Potter, Stand Up, Nigel Barton, about the son of a coal miner gaining a place at Oxford University during this period of social change. The project and the article show that the art of working-class storytelling is both political and personal, and despite the lack of working-class voices in the arts, in the culture industries and in academia, small storytelling events such as this one play an important part in strengthening working-class communities.Citation
Mckenzie L (2024) 'Over the kitchen table: British storytelling as working-class art, belonging and resistance', Journal of Class & Culture, 3 (2), pp.111-119.Publisher
Intellect BooksJournal
Journal of Class & CultureAdditional Links
https://intellectdiscover.com/content/journals/10.1386/jclc_00043_1Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
2634-1123EISSN
2634-1123ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1386/jclc_00043_1
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