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Sixties: Big Ideas, Small Books [Paperback / softback]

3.41/5 (539 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Format: Paperback / softback, 160 pages, height x width x depth: 182x119x11 mm, weight: 145 g
  • Series: Big Ideas//Small Books
  • Pub. Date: 01-Sep-2009
  • Publisher: Picador USA
  • ISBN-10: 0312427212
  • ISBN-13: 9780312427214
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  • Paperback / softback
  • Price: 23,80 €
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  • Format: Paperback / softback, 160 pages, height x width x depth: 182x119x11 mm, weight: 145 g
  • Series: Big Ideas//Small Books
  • Pub. Date: 01-Sep-2009
  • Publisher: Picador USA
  • ISBN-10: 0312427212
  • ISBN-13: 9780312427214
Other books in subject:
A tribute to Londons 1960s counter-culture describes the authors reminiscences about how she spent the era demonstrating, having sex, and spending time in mental hospitals, activities the author came to regard as reflective of period ideas about freedom and tolerance. Original. 35,000 first printing. Describes the authors reminiscences about how she spent the 1960s being a political activist, sex addict, and mental patient, which she believes reflect the eras ideas about freedom and tolerance. An alternative take on sixties swinging London, Jenny Diski offers radical reconsiderations of the social, political, and personal meaning of that turbulent era. What was Jenny Diski doing in the sixties? A lot: dropping out, taking drugs, buying clothes, having sex, demonstrating, and spending time in mental hospitals. Now, as Diski herself turns sixty years old, she examines what has been lost in the purple haze of nostalgia and selective memory of that era, what endures, and what has always been the same.From the vantage point of London, she takes stock of the sexual revolution, the fashions, the drug culture, the psychiatric movements, and the education systems of the day. What she discovers is that the ideas of the sixties often paved the way for their antithesis, and that by confusing liberation and libertarianism, a new kind of radicalism would take over both in Britain and America. A brilliant, alternative take on sixties swinging London, Jenny Diski offers radical reconsiderations of the social, political, and personal meaning of that turbulent era.What was Jenny Diski doing in the sixties? A lot: dropping out, taking drugs, buying clothes, having sex, demonstrating, and spending time in mental hospitals. Now, as Diski herself turns sixty years old, she examines what has been lost in the purple haze of nostalgia and selective memory of that era, what endures, and what has always been the same. From the vantage point of London, she takes stock of the Sexual Revolution, the fashion, the drug culture, and the psychiatric movements and education systems of the day. What she discovers is that the ideas of the sixties often paved the way for their antithesis, and that by confusing liberation and libertarianism, a new kind of radicalism would take over both in the UK and America.Witty, provocative, and gorgeously written, Jenny Diski promises to feed your head with new insights about everything that was, andis, the sixties.