Arts & Ideas

Working Class Creativity

14 snips
Feb 13, 2026
Ian La Frenais, veteran TV writer whose credits include The Likely Lads and Porridge, reflects on writing and working-class characters. Samuel Johnson-Schlee, historian of domestic life, links central heating and home changes to sitcom worlds. Laura Minor, TV historian, explores shifting portrayals of class. Jacqueline Riding, Chaplin scholar, traces Lambeth roots. Adelle Stripe, novelist, shares contemporary working-class perspectives.
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INSIGHT

Working Class As Cultural Actor

  • E.P. Thompson argued working class identity is cultural and moral, not just economic.
  • Creative acts by workers are expressions of a class in formation, not anomalies.
INSIGHT

Voice And Agency On Screen

  • Contemporary sitcoms often let working-class characters narrate and control their stories.
  • Shows like Chewing Gum and Alma's Not Normal shift from victimhood to comic agency.
ADVICE

Invest In Behind-The-Scenes Diversity

  • Change on screen starts with people behind the camera, not just performers.
  • Keep entrants in the industry by sustaining schemes rather than letting them end after initial training.
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