Author:
Dr. Jayalakshmi B.
Abstract:
Trevor Griffiths (b. 1935), a key figure in British political theatre from a Northern working-class milieu, leveraged drama to advance leftist causes, educate audiences, and challenge capitalist structures. Influenced by the 1968 upheavals alongside peers like David Hare, Howard Brenton, David Edgar, and John McGrath, Griffiths spanned genres including stage, television, film, and radio. His 1982 play Oi for England, premiered at the Royal Court Theatre, dissects the rise of working-class youth subcultures—specifically skinheads—in post-war Britain. It portrays their dual role as resistors to dominant culture and unwitting victims of fascist exploitation amid 1980s socio-economic crises. This expanded analysis elucidates Griffiths' nuanced depiction of youth counter-culture, ideological fractures within skinhead groups, the instrumentalization of "Oi!" music, and the pervasive politics of racism under Thatcherism. By weaving historical context with dramatic technique, the paper argues that Griffiths employs theatre as a diagnostic tool for class struggle and cultural resistance.
Keywords:
Youth culture, skinheads, post-war Britain, Trevor Griffiths, Thatcherism, Oi music, political theatre.
Article Info:
Received: 25 Jan 2026; Received in revised form: 22 Feb 2026; Accepted: 24 Feb 2026; Available online: 28 Feb 2026
DOI:
10.22161/ijels.111.69