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 nationand explain why we are still feeling the aftershocks today. }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 Madonnas Material Girl and Oliver Stones 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 nationand 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 totemsthis 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 chicaneryalthough 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 like The Big Chill and feel-good democratic displays of international activism like Live Aid, in the overnight sensation of cocaine-fueled, star-studded nightclubs like New York Citys Limelight, in the flamboyant mood of hit television shows like Dynasty and Dallas, and in the success of The Closing of the American Mind, Allan Blooms 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 Eighties sheds new light on the decade that brought us Ronald Reagan and MTV, a decade that continues to frame some of todays most vexing political, economic, and cultural debates }
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978-0-201-77240-1 (9780201772401)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Antecedents; From The Culture of Narcissism; (Christopher Lasch); The Adversary Culture of Intellectuals (Irving Kristol); From The View from Sunset Boulevard; (Ben Stein); The Fashionable Mind (Kennedy Fraser); Cultural Politics; The Appearance of AIDS; From Hunger of Memory; (Richard Rodriguez); From Crime and American Culture (James Q. Wilson); The New Porn Wars (Jean Bethke Elshtain); Now What? (David Brooks); The Culture of Apathy; New Yorkers Growing Angry Over Aggressive Panhandlers (Fox Butterfield); Being Black and Feeling Blue (Shelby Steele); Boomers On The Make; The Mass Market Is Splitting Apart (Bruce Steinberg); From Beyond Our Means; (Alfred L. Malabre Jr.); The Money Society (Myron Magnet); From Money and Class in America; (Lewis H. Lapham); The Last Days of Drexel Burnham (Brett Duval Fromson); Hot And Cool; R.I.P (James Wolcott); Limelight; On First Looking into Emily Posts Etiquette; (P. J. ORourke); From Amusing Ourselves to Death (Neil Postman); Sitcom (Eric Bogosian); The Death of Andy Warhol (Hilton Kramer); The Literary Brat Pack (Bruce Bawer); Forever Young (Ronald Steel); The House Of Intellect; The Fall of the American Adam (C. Vann Woodward); Our Listless Universities (Allan Bloom); Cultural Literacy (E. D. Hirsch Jr.); Radicalism for Yuppies (Louis Menand); Debating the Humanities at Yale (Roger Kimball); Why the West? (William J. Bennett); Bennett Misreads Stanfords Classics (Stephen R. Graubard); Allan Bloom and E. D. Hirsch: Educational Reform as Tragedy and Farce (Helene Moglen); Battle of the Books (James Atlas); From The Storm Over the University (John Searle); The Movement Of Culture; From After Virtue (Alasdair MacIntyre); The Worship of Art (Tom Wolfe); Ethics Without Virtue (Christina Hoff Sommers) {<!-- -->