The Eighties: A Reader
Editat de Gilbert T. Sewallen Limba Engleză Paperback – 5 noi 1998
The
America
of
the
1980s
is
often
caricatured
as
a
time
of
yuppie
greed
and
self-absorption.
But
what
was
driving
that
decades
rampant
pursuit
of
individual
pleasure?
What
were
the
cultural
forces
behind
Madonna's
”Material
Girl”
and
Oliver
Stone's
Wall
Street?
These
fascinating
essays,
collected
by
historian
Gilbert
T.
Sewall
from
the
major
books,
journals,
news
reports,
and
public
addresses
of
the
day,
survey
the
tumultuous
social
change
that
engulfed
the
nation—and
explain
why
we
are
still
feeling
the
aftershocks
today.With
contributions
by
such
diverse
figures
as
Chistopher
Lasch,
Lewis
H.
Lapham,
Eric
Bogosian,
and
Hilton
Kramer,
The
Eighties
touches
on
the
hallmarks
of
the
age:
celebrity
culture
and
hype,
exhibitionism
and
shamelessness,
academic
ferment,
and
the
lure
of
money.
Kennedy
Fraser
on
the
new
trend
machine.
James
Q.
Wilson
on
attitudes
toward
crime,
Shelby
Steele
on
African
American
angst,
Tom
Wolfe
on
art
objects
as
religious
totems—this
lively
reader
brings
together,
for
the
first
time,
the
voices
that
defined
an
era.As
Sewall
so
deftly
tells
it,
the
story
of
the
1980s
is
not
merely
one
of
politics
or
financial
chicanery—although
both
get
their
due
in
the
book.
The
1980s
were
an
era
of
disquieting
attitudes,
fantasies,
and
dreams.
As
Americans
experienced
new
forms
of
social
anxiety
and
spiritual
crisis,
the
debate
over
what
constitutes
excellence
in
the
arts
and
in
education
touched
off
the
so-called
culture
wars.
All
of
this
is
evident
in
the
rise
of
identity
politics
as
well
as
in
films
likeThe
Big
Chilland
feel-good
democratic
displays
of
international
activism
like
Live
Aid,
in
the
overnight
sensation
of
cocaine-fueled,
star-studded
nightclubs
like
New
York
City's
Limelight,
in
the
flamboyant
mood
of
hit
television
shows
like
Dynasty
and
Dallas,
and
in
the
success
ofThe
Closing
of
the
American
Mind,Allan
Bloom's
staunch
defense
of
Western
tradition.Invigorated
conservatism
in
politics
and
society
was,
paradoxically,
accompanied
by
the
ascent
of
a
new
establishment
of
”tenured
radicals,”
for
whom
alternative
values
and
cultural
innovation
supported
lucrative
careers.
Finally
empowered
to
make
the
social
and
political
changes
they
had
only
dreamed
about
in
earlier
decades,
these
boomers
stimulated
an
acrimonious
debate
over
the
nature
of
the
good
life
and
the
soul
of
the
nation.With
remarkable
verve,The
Eightiessheds
new
light
on
the
decade
that
brought
us
Ronald
Reagan
and
MTV,
a
decade
that
continues
to
frame
some
of
today's
most
vexing
political,
economic,
and
cultural
debates
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780738200354
ISBN-10: 0738200352
Pagini: 416
Dimensiuni: 152 x 230 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.62 kg
Editura: Hachette Book Group
Colecția Da Capo Press
Locul publicării:United States
ISBN-10: 0738200352
Pagini: 416
Dimensiuni: 152 x 230 x 27 mm
Greutate: 0.62 kg
Editura: Hachette Book Group
Colecția Da Capo Press
Locul publicării:United States
Notă biografică
George
T.
Sewellis
the
president
of
the
Center
for
Education
Studies
and
director
of
the
American
Textbook
Council
in
New
York
City.
He
is
also
a
senior
research
associate
at
Boston
University.
His
articles
have
appeared
inFortune,
The
New
York
Times,andThe
Wall
Street
Journal,and
he
is
most
recently
the
author
ofReligion
in
the
Classroom:
What
the
Textbooks
Tell
Us.