Up the Junction

Up the Junction is a 1963 collection of short stories by Nell Dunn that depicts contemporary life in the industrial slums of Battersea and Clapham Junction.[1]

Up the Junction
First edition
AuthorNell Dunn
IllustratorSusan Benson
CountryUK
LanguageEnglish
PublisherMacGibbon & Kee
Publication date
1963
Media typePrint (Hardcover and Paperback)
Pages110 pp (Hardcover edition) & 112 pp (paperback edition)
OCLC17230966

The book uses colloquial speech, and its portrayal of petty thieving, sexual encounters, births, deaths and back-street abortion provided a view of life that was previously unrecognised by many people. The book won the 1963 John Llewellyn Rhys Memorial Prize.

Adaptations

In 1965 it was adapted for television by the BBC as part of The Wednesday Play anthology series directed by Ken Loach.[2]

A cinema film version followed in 1968 with a soundtrack by Manfred Mann.[3]

The television version of the play was the inspiration for the 1979 Squeeze hit "Up the Junction".[4]

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gollark: Practically, assuming you have remotely user-controllable computers and stuff, and you can't meddle with the network, you probably can't do much to stop people from doing necromancy outside of saying "WARNING: bargaining with mysterious entities on the extranet is a Bad Idea™".
gollark: I was referring to filtering "liches and other stuff necromancers stumble upon".
gollark: *Can* they actually filter that (EDIT: referring to "liches and other stuff necromancers stumble upon") in practice, given the whole "end to end encryption" thing, apart from somehow not letting those on the network?
gollark: SCP-2167 and the other demonics stuff (http://www.scp-wiki.net/a-brief-explanation-on-demonics) probably qualifies.

References


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