| | This article or section is missing citations or needs footnotes. Using inline citations helps guard against copyright violations and factual inaccuracies. | James Moffat (born 1922 in Australia, died 1993 in England), was an author who wrote under several pen names. Image File history File links Emblem-important. ...
For other uses, see England (disambiguation). ...
A pen name or nom de plume is a pseudonym adopted by an author. ...
He produced many pulp novels for the United Kingdom publishing house New English Library during the 1970s. Moffat's pen names included Richard Allen, Etienne Aubin (The Terror of the Seven Crypts) and Trudi Maxwell (Diary of A Female Wrestler). Moffat's pulp novels mostly focused on youth subcultures of the late 1960s and 1970s, such as skinheads, hippies and bikers. Moffat often expressed admiration for his subject matter and commented on social issues, mostly from a right wing perspective This article is about inexpensive fiction magazines. ...
The New English Library is a United Kingdom book publishing company, which became an imprint of Hodder Headline. ...
A pen name or nom de plume is a pseudonym adopted by an author. ...
Richard Allen was one of the many pen names of cult author James Moffat. ...
In sociology, anthropology and cultural studies, a subculture is a set of people with a set of behaviors and beliefs, culture, which could be distinct or hidden, that differentiate them from the larger culture to which they belong. ...
Skinheads, named for their close-cropped or shaven heads, are a working-class subculture that originated in the United Kingdom in the late 1960s, and then spread to other parts of the world. ...
Hippies (singular hippie or sometimes hippy) were members of the 1960s counterculture movement who adopted a communal or nomadic lifestyle, renounced corporate nationalism and the Vietnam War, embraced aspects of Buddhism, Hinduism, and/or Native American religious culture, and were otherwise at odds with traditional middle class Western values. ...
Imme R 100,Germany, 1948/1949 A 125 cc motorcycle, the Italian-manufactured Cagiva Planet. ...
In politics, right-wing, the political right, or simply the right, are terms which refer, with no particular precision, to the segment of the political spectrum in opposition to left-wing politics. ...
The collected works of Richard Allen were reissued in a six volume set by ST Publishing in the 1990s. A BBC TV documentary about his life, Skinhead Farewell, aired in 1996. Allen's formulaic and sensationalist writing style has been imitated by Neoist writer Stewart Home. Mark Sargeant wrote a feature in Scootering Magazine titled The Richard Allen Legacy. An interview titled The Return of Joe Hawkins with publisher George Marshall was in issue seven of Skinhead Times (1992). For other uses, see BBC (disambiguation). ...
Documentary film is a broad category of visual expression that is based on the attempt, in one fashion or another, to document reality. ...
Street action at the 6th Neoist Apartment Festival in Montreal, 1983 Neoism refers both to a specific subcultural network of artistic performance and media experimentalists and more generally to a practical underground philosophy. ...
Stewart Home (born 1962) is a writer, subcultural pamphleteer, underground art historian, and activist. ...
Books written as Richard Allen - Boot Boys
- Demo
- Dragon Skins
- Knuckle Girls
- Mod Rule
- Punk Rock
- Skinhead
- Skinhead Escapes
- Skinhead Farewell
- Skinhead Girls
- Smoothies
- Sorts
- Suedehead
- Teeny Bopper Idol
- Terrace Terrors
- Top-Gear For Skinhead
- Trouble For Skinhead (originally to be titled Skinhead In Trouble)
External link I read that he was born in Canada which information is correct? |