Viva Hate was released on 14 March 1988 by record label
His Master's Voice. EMI Australia considered
Viva Hate too harsh a title and renamed the album
Education in Reverse for LP release in Australia and New Zealand, the same title appearing as an etching on the vinyl. The American release included the track "
Hairdresser on Fire", which had been released in the UK as a B-side to "Suedehead", as track 9. This same track was released on a 7" single that was sold with the album in Japan. The track "Margaret on the Guillotine", which described the death of then-prime minister
Margaret Thatcher as a "wonderful dream", led to Morrissey briefly being questioned by the
Special Branch. It was certified Gold by the
RIAA on 16 November 1993. In 1997,
EMI, in celebration of their 100th anniversary, released a
remastered special edition of this album in the UK. It features different cover art and a different booklet (it has a photograph of a
billboard for the 1993 live album
Beethoven Was Deaf and drops the lyrics) as well as eight bonus tracks – only one of which was contemporaneous with the album. "Hairdresser on Fire" does not appear on this version. A newly remastered, special edition of
Viva Hate, supervised by Stephen Street, was released on 2 April 2012. This edition controversially omits, along with the name of Vini Reilly, one of the original album's tracks, "The Ordinary Boys", and includes the session outtake "Treat Me Like a Human Being". Also, the extended fadeout of "Late Night, Maudlin Street" has been removed. Stephen Street has said that he felt these changes were a mistake but that the track selection was changed at Morrissey's insistence. "Hairdresser on Fire", again, is also not included on this edition. Additionally, the typeface font on the front cover had been changed. ==Critical reception==