Analysis Of Jeanette Winterson's 'Cathy Come Home'

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“Cathy Come Home” is remembered as one of Britain’s most famous television dramas. When it was aired on the BBC, there was wide spread outrage at how so many people and families were suffering as a result of a government that was ignoring a serious national problem. The drama was an attack on council housing waiting lists and showed how the state had a policy of separating husbands from their wives and children when a whole family was homeless. It showed the ordinary people of Britain how those less fortunate were treated by the State and how the system allowed these unfortunate people slip through the cracks of the Welfare State. “Cathy Come Home’s” final scene is still one of the most remembered scenes in television history. The final scene shows Cathy at her lowest standing at Liverpool Street Station with her two children which remained in her custody. They are approached by social workers who then proceed to drag both her …show more content…

The novel was then adapted into a television drama by the BBC. Directed by Beeban Kidron, “Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit” tells the story of Jess, a young girl who lives with her mother. The mother is a church fanatic and lives by the Bible. The drama tells its story in the same way the Bible does, through chapters by the same name. Jess and her mother belong to a fundamentalist Christian sect and Jess has been brought up in a very strict home. As a girl Jess followed her Evangelist mother and pastor’s preaching’s. However, as she grows up and becomes a teenager, her ideals change and she becomes more independent in what she wants in life. At the age of sixteen she falls in love for the first time to a girl called Melanie. Their relationship is soon destroyed by the pastor and Jess’ mother. After being publically embarrassed by the mother and pastor, Jess eventually decides to leave the church and her mother and go off to university to

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