Sixties
Publisher: Oxford University Press, 1998001: 2624ISBN: 019210022XDDC classification: 942.085 MARItem type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | MAIN LIBRARY Book | 942.085 MAR (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 045319 |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
If the World Wars defined the first half of the twentieth century, the sixties defined the second half, providing the pivot on which modern times have turned. From popular music to individual liberties, the tastes and convictions of the Western world are indelibly stamped with the impact of that tumultuous decade.
Now one of the world's foremost historians provides the definitive look at this momentous time. Framing the sixties as a period stretching from 1958 to 1974, Arthur Marwick argues that this long decade ushered in nothing less than a cultural revolution--one that raged most clearly in the United States, Britain, France, and Italy. Writing with wit and verve, he brilliantly recaptures the events and movements that shaped our lives: the rise of a youth subculture across the West; the impact of post Beat novels and New Wave cinema; the sit ins and marches of the civil rights movement; Britain's surprising rise to leadership in fashion and music; the emerging storm over Vietnam; the Paris student rising of 1968; the new concern for poverty; the growing force of feminism and the gay rights movement; and much more. As Marwick unfolds his vivid narrative, he illuminates this remarkable era--both its origins and its impact. He concludes that it was a time that saw great leaps forward in the arts, in civil rights, and in many other areas of society and politics. But the decade also left deep divisions still felt today.
Written with tremendous force of insight and narrative power, The Sixties promises to be the single most important account of the single most important decade of our times.
Table of contents provided by Syndetics
- I Introduction
- 1 Was there a cultural revolution c.1958c.1974?
- 2 If so, why?
- II The first stirrings of a cultural revolution 195863
- 3 New actors, new activities
- 4 Art, morality, and social relations
- 5 Race
- III The high sixties
- 6 Acts of God and acts of government
- 7 Pushing paradigms to their utmost limits, or creative extremism: structuralism, conceptualism, and indeterminacy
- 8 Affluence, poverty, and permissiveness
- 9 Beauty, booze, and the built environment
- 10 National and other identities
- 11 Freedom, turbulence and death
- 12 Nineteen sixty-eight (and '69)
- IV Everything goes, and catching up 1969-74
- 13 Women's turn
- 14 Full effrontery
- 15 Living life to the full
- V Conclusion
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Reviews provided by Syndetics
Booklist Review
Marwick, a historian at Britain's Open University, takes on the broad sweep of midcentury change, dividing the "long sixties" in the U.S., U.K., France, and Italy into three sub-eras: 1958^-63, 1964^-69, and 1969^-74. In his introduction, Marwick declares himself an atheist "in respect to Marxism . . . [and a nonbeliever in] the ideology of monetarism, market economics, and . . . unbridled private enterprise," which will annoy poststructuralists but delight nonacademic readers. Among his controversial positions are emphases on the "outburst of entrepreneurialism" the sixties' subcultures generated and on the key role played by "a liberal, progressive presence within the institutions of authority," whose "measured judgment" permitted those subcultures "to permeate and transform society." Marwick's canvas is broad: four nations; nearly 20 years; new youth subcultures; important trends in music, books, movies, art, and architecture; movements for several different types of liberation and against war and pollution; and massive changes in ordinary citizens' lives, largely due to technology and expansion of the "consumer society" that the counterculture deplored. A complex era, thoughtfully probed. --Mary CarrollKirkus Book Review
A scholarly, earnest, sometimes dense cultural history of the decade. English historian Marwick (Britain in Our Century, 1985, etc.) seems determined to rescue the 1960s, both from orthodox leftist historians (who view the era as an explosion of the youthful bourgeoisie) and from conservatives (who believe that it brought about the decline and fall of Western civilization). Marwick enumerates the periods cultural, artistic, and political achievements, which, he believes, really began in 1958 (the year big business headed full-tilt at the youth market, and the year popular music shifted to rock 'n roll) and ended in 1974, when the oil crisis reached consumers around the world and set off a wave of conservative reaction. The authors viewpoint is European. Much of what he says will be unfamiliar to American readers (as, for instance, when he discusses the role of upper-crust English schools in shaping political radicalism). Much else, however, concerns common ground, especially when Marwick writes about music. Hes also perceptive about the literature of the time and how it influenced other forms of expression. For example, he includes an interview with ex-Beatle Paul McCartney, who reminisces about the influence of Jack Kerouacs autobiographical novel On the Road on British youth in the late 1950s. And Marwick has a lot to tell us about the student revolt in France and Italy of 1968 and 1969. Occasionally, he gets a little too pedantically encyclopedic for his own good, as in examining the miniskirt, which, almost always worn with tights, was a very popular, and even tenacious, fashion, being worn and argued over after the advent of hot pants . . . and then, in the classic fashion pattern of extreme innovation followed by extreme reaction, the maxiskirt, which reached to the ankles. Even then, however, he offers a fine resource for students of the era. And for those who remember Marcuse, McLuhan, and Marx fondly, Marwicks tome will offer a stimulating stroll down memory lane.There are no comments on this title.