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== Decline == The "[[Angry Young Men]]" movement occurred in 1956 during the turning point of the Movement.<ref>[http://www.britannica.com.cat1.lib.trentu.ca:8080/EBchecked/topic/25251/Angry-Young-Men Angry Young Men]</ref> [[David Lodge (author)|David Lodge]] attributed the Movement's decline to the publication of the ''New Lines'' anthology.<ref name="google2"/> After these events, the Movement became less exclusive. Members were no longer required to fight and defend one another's work, for they had become accepted members of the literary world. The Movement was succeeded in the 1960s by β[[The Group (literature)|The Group]]β, whose members included [[Philip Hobsbaum]], [[Alan Brownjohn]], [[Adrian Mitchell]], [[Peter Porter (poet)|Peter Porter]], Edward Lucie-Smith, [[George MacBeth]], [[Ian Hamilton (critic)|Ian Hamilton]]'s Review school and [[Michael Horovitz]]'s "Children of Albion".<ref name="google2"/> The Group was similar to the Movement; they shared similar ideas about the form and seriousness of modernist poetry.<ref name="google1"/>
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