Ban This Filth!: Letters from the Mary Whitehouse Archive 1963-2001 is a 2012 non-fiction book edited by Ben Thompson and published by Faber & Faber. It is a collection of letters written by Mary Whitehouse, leader of the National Viewers' and Listeners' Association, who perceived a coarsening of material in the BBC.
The author previously served as a ghost writer for books credited to famous people and wrote articles about music for publications. [1]
The book uses content about Whitehouse held at the NVLA archives at Essex University, which occupies 300 files. [1] Jonathan Sale of The Daily Telegraph described some of the contents as "richly humorous". [2]
According to Sale, the comments written by the editor were " droll". [2] Karl Miller of the Irish Times described the style of the comments as "a smart, media-wise, Jack the Lad commentary that knows enough to recognise it’s right to ask: was she right?" [3]
The editor argued that the changes Whitehouse advocated for would have negatively affected British culture, [2] but he also believed that some of her points may have had merits. [3] Martin Fletcher of The Independent wrote "From a liberal perspective, it's not the singularity of her opinions that unsettle, but rather the issues she got right". [4]
The Daily Telegraph ranked the book four of five stars, giving praise for the "relentlessly jaunty tone" in Thomopson's commentary. [1]
Stuart Jeffries of The Guardian described the book as "entertaining". [5]
Fletcher praised the book's comments for being "admirably even-handed" and "witty and engaging". [4]
[...]it's right to ask: was she right? Yes and no is an answer – his, I think – that would not have pleased the late Mary, for whom black was black and white white.
Ban This Filth!: Letters from the Mary Whitehouse Archive 1963-2001 is a 2012 non-fiction book edited by Ben Thompson and published by Faber & Faber. It is a collection of letters written by Mary Whitehouse, leader of the National Viewers' and Listeners' Association, who perceived a coarsening of material in the BBC.
The author previously served as a ghost writer for books credited to famous people and wrote articles about music for publications. [1]
The book uses content about Whitehouse held at the NVLA archives at Essex University, which occupies 300 files. [1] Jonathan Sale of The Daily Telegraph described some of the contents as "richly humorous". [2]
According to Sale, the comments written by the editor were " droll". [2] Karl Miller of the Irish Times described the style of the comments as "a smart, media-wise, Jack the Lad commentary that knows enough to recognise it’s right to ask: was she right?" [3]
The editor argued that the changes Whitehouse advocated for would have negatively affected British culture, [2] but he also believed that some of her points may have had merits. [3] Martin Fletcher of The Independent wrote "From a liberal perspective, it's not the singularity of her opinions that unsettle, but rather the issues she got right". [4]
The Daily Telegraph ranked the book four of five stars, giving praise for the "relentlessly jaunty tone" in Thomopson's commentary. [1]
Stuart Jeffries of The Guardian described the book as "entertaining". [5]
Fletcher praised the book's comments for being "admirably even-handed" and "witty and engaging". [4]
[...]it's right to ask: was she right? Yes and no is an answer – his, I think – that would not have pleased the late Mary, for whom black was black and white white.