7" Single on 45cat: Hughie Green - Stand Up And Be Counted / Land Of Hope And Glory - Philips - UK - GB 1 This article is also available for rental through DeepDyve. EUR €27.00
This was generally as welcome as a turd in a swimming pool, and Green was disciplined by Thames TV for essentially …
Joe Moran, ‘Stand Up and Be Counted’: Hughie Green, the 1970s and Popular Memory, This article takes as its starting point a speech made in 1976 by the television presenter Hughie Green at the end of the Christmas edition of Most users should sign in with their email address. Green’s ‘stand up and be counted’ speech, with its explicit references to the IMF crisis (‘do we need loans for these?’), brought all these anxieties together into a heady concoction of middle-class disquiet and patriotic indignation, leading up to an orchestral climax which sought rhetorical closure to the traumatic events of the previous few months. Lost in Transmission? Oxford University Press is a department of the University of Oxford. To purchase short term access, please sign in to your Oxford Academic account above. Search for other works by this author on: View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1977 Vinyl release of Stand Up And Be Counted on Discogs. 'Stand Up and Be Counted': Hughie Green, the 1970s and Popular Memory Art, Collaboration and Multi-Sensory Approaches in Public Microhistory: Label: Philips - GB 1 • Format: Vinyl 7 Hughie Green - Stand Up And Be Counted (1977, Vinyl) | … Data Correct If you originally registered with a username please use that to sign in. You do not currently have access to this article. Photojournalism and the Moss Side Riots of 1981: Narrowly Selective Transparency © The Author 2010. Hughie Green Stand Up And Be Counted: Member: Rating: matlin: 1: Overall Rating: 1.0: « View Record USD $35.00
Stand Up And Be Counted
Please check your email address / username and password and try again. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of History Workshop Journal, all rights reserved. It furthers the University's objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwideFor full access to this pdf, sign in to an existing account, or purchase an annual subscription. It has been suggested that Green believed that Harold Wilson and his Labour government were communists and that Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, should replace Wilson as leader of the country and, to that end, he used Opportunity Knocks as an end-of-year soapbox, telling the country at the end of 1974 to 'wake up!' GBP £20.00 You could not be signed in. John Berger and the Origins of Don't already have an Oxford Academic account? Two years later, in December 1976, Green recited a monologue about the state of … At the end of an episode of Opportunity Knocks, instead of wishing everyone a Merry Christmas, he instead performed a bizarre song/rant entitled Stand Up and Be Counted, a call to arms that urged Britain to regain its lost glories, primarily by stopping going on strike. The song, ‘Stand Up and Be Counted’, was released as a single in January 1977 and Green embarked on a publicity tour to promote it, but it failed to make the charts.