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The Sixties Unplugged: A Kaleidoscopic History of a Disorderly Decade | 
enlarge | Author: Gerard J. Degroot Publisher: Harvard University Press Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $18.57 You Save: $11.38 (38%)
New (25) Used (6) from $18.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 3 reviews Sales Rank: 189615
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 528 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.4 x 1.7
ISBN: 0674027868 Dewey Decimal Number: 909.826 EAN: 9780674027862 ASIN: 0674027868
Publication Date: March 28, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New, Perfect Condition, Please allow 4-14 business days for delivery. 100% Money Back Guarantee, Over 1,000,000 customers served.
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Product Description
“If you remember the Sixties,” quipped Robin Williams, “you weren’t there.” That was, of course, an oblique reference to the mind-bending drugs that clouded perception?yet time has proven an equally effective hallucinogen. This book revisits the Sixties we forgot or somehow failed to witness. In a kaleidoscopic global tour of the decade, Gerard DeGroot reminds us that the “Ballad of the Green Beret” outsold “Give Peace a Chance,” that the Students for a Democratic Society were outnumbered by Young Americans for Freedom, that revolution was always a pipe dream, and that the Sixties belong to Reagan and de Gaulle more than to Kennedy and Dubcek. The Sixties Unplugged shows how opportunity was squandered, and why nostalgia for the decade has obscured sordidness and futility. DeGroot returns us to a time in which idealism, tolerance, and creativity gave way to cynicism, chauvinism, and materialism. He presents the Sixties as a drama acted out on stages around the world, a theater of the absurd in which China’s Cultural Revolution proved to be the worst atrocity of the twentieth century, the Six-Day War a disaster for every nation in the Middle East, and a million slaughtered Indonesians martyrs to greed. The Sixties Unplugged restores to an era the prevalent disorder and inconvenient truths that longing, wistfulness, and distance have obscured. In an impressionistic journey through a tumultuous decade, DeGroot offers an object lesson in the distortions nostalgia can create as it strives to impose order on memory and value on mayhem. (20080323)
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| Customer Reviews:
Unlike a Rolling Stone July 22, 2008 No COINTELPRO? Debunking the American counter-culture is impossible without putting an electron microscope on the activities of the CIA and the FBI. As to the indestructible spirit of the decade that still persists generation after generation... "Something is happening here and you don't know what it is, do you Mr. Jones?" Yippie! er...I mean, LOL!!!!!!!
A Good Travel Book July 8, 2008 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
I find myself in general agreement with the five-star review above. The book's format lends itself to being enjoyed in short bits and pieces while travelling or in other similiar situations where a long uninterrupted read is impossible. Despite the book's lack of a continous narrative it does convey one clear message. While concervative's still rant about the sixties' liberals, feminists, secularists, etc., the concervatives 'won'. That win extended far beyond the US. In France, W. Germany, Mexico and in the Soviet Bloc, the forces of the status quo were victorious. Yes, there were partial victories by the forces of change--in the US civil rights, in France and W. Germany educational reform--but the right in every political system won. The scarey thing is that the liberals/progressives know they lost but the right does not know that it won.
Excellent June 18, 2008 4 out of 7 found this review helpful
A well-crafted compendium of the notable events and people of the Sixties. Arranged as self-contained vignettes, it reads like a short story anthology. Writing is crisp and insightful, with an abundance of tongue-in-cheek humor. Sets out to debunk many of the popular but mythical historical viewpoints of the decade and add clarity and analysis to much that seems inexplicable, and achieves these aims. Also discusses many international events and people to avoid making this a U.S.-only story. Includes appropriate background from earlier decades as well as projection into future years, for historical context. This is history at its best.
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