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  1. Los Angry Young Men (jóvenes iracundos o jóvenes airados) fueron un grupo de escritores británicos de mediados del siglo XX. Sus obras expresan la amargura de las clases bajas respecto al sistema sociopolítico imperante de su tiempo y la mediocridad e hipocresía de las clases media y alta .

  2. The "angry young men" were a group of mostly working- and middle-class British playwrights and novelists who became prominent in the 1950s. The group's leading figures included John Osborne and Kingsley Amis; other popular figures included John Braine, Alan Sillitoe, and John Wain.

  3. Angry Young Men, various British novelists and playwrights who emerged in the 1950s and expressed scorn and disaffection with the established sociopolitical order of their country. Their impatience and resentment were especially aroused by what they perceived as the hypocrisy and mediocrity of the upper and middle classes.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Los Angry Young Men ( jóvenes iracundos o jóvenes airados) fueron un grupo de escritores británicos de mediados del siglo XX. Sus obras expresan la amargura de las clases bajas respecto al sistema sociopolítico imperante de su tiempo y la mediocridad e hipocresía de las clases media y alta.

  5. Alan Sillitoe FRSL (4 March 1928 – 25 April 2010) was an English writer and one of the so-called "angry young men" of the 1950s. He disliked the label, as did most of the other writers to whom it was applied.

  6. Historia. Características. Películas más representativas. Referencias. Free cinema. Apariencia. ocultar. Free Cinema es un movimiento cinematográfico británico que nace en febrero de 1956, a partir del “ Manifiesto de los Jóvenes Airados ” ( Angry Young Men) y se prolonga a lo largo de toda la década de 1960.

  7. 21 de abr. de 2024 · Angry Young Men. Alan Sillitoe (born March 4, 1928, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England—died April 25, 2010, London) was a writer, one of the so-called Angry Young Men, whose brash and angry accounts of working-class life injected new vigour into post-World War II British fiction.