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The Sixties: Big Ideas, Small Books [Deckle Edge] [Paperback]

Jenny Diski (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

September 1, 2009
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, and is, the sixties.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Starred Review. Like many other members of her generation, journalist and author Diski (On Trying to Keep Still) was drifting during the 1960s: she took drugs, had sex, and spent time in mental institutions in her attempts to subvert the Establishment. Cutting through the patina of nobility, nostalgia and idealism by which most of her fellows remember the time, Diski describes a counterculture ruled by intense self-absorption, a misguided, idealist attempt at radical reform that led directly to the corruption of the '80s. Diski brings as much objectivity to bear as she can, and her British perspective keeps her a few paces removed from the conflicts over civil rights and Vietnam. Her writing is pointed, holding many (herself included) to rigorous scrutiny, a cultural deconstruction that pushes back against the generally accepted, media-friendly, and very American image of the free-love '60s. Even readers familiar with the history will find her insights absorbing and eyebrow-raising. Though her conclusion falls short of condemnation-their motives were too pure for that-Diski makes succinct, clever and meaningful arguments exposing a self-mythologizing generation and its ultimate failures of both fore- and hindsight.

Review

"In this brief volume, Diski brings the period into focus via a largely personal approach…. Ultimately, Diski suggests, the 1960s were more about illusions than revolution. The truth is more prosaic but also more interesting: It was a period in which disposable income, easy access to education and hipster capitalism encouraged an explosion of youthful enthusiasm (and youthful self-indulgence) that, as all youth movements, existed in a bubble, willfully unaware of the complexities of adulthood or even that anyone had ever felt this way before…. It's the measure of this book that she can simultaneously acknowledge this and embrace the messy, hopeful chaos of her own youth, in which "[n]arcissism meets the mirror stage and neither condition actually stops in infancy, especially when the times collude."—David Ulin, The Los Angeles Times

"Powerful… Diski has fascinating--and entertaining--things to say about the differences between the '60s generation and their parents, drugs, the sexual revolution, communes, and the difference between America and her native Britain… She recalls (sometimes hilariously) her experience of the '60s… with intelligence, wit, an eye for detail and an extraordinary ability to laugh at her young self while respecting that self's hopes and efforts… Jenny Diski leaves you with plenty to think about, and wanting more."--The New York Times Book Review

"The Sixties is Diski at her most characteristically brilliant. . . . She is one of Britain's sharpest social commentators, her writing distinguished by its bleak wit, its honesty and acerbity."--Michèle Roberts, Financial Times (UK)

"Involving, buoyant, thought-provoking...at once recalls the decade in a way that those who experienced it will recognize and is a singular rethink of that time. Diski is not polemical or doctrinaire. Her writing is calm and wry and her gift is for thinking about the sixties as if they were happening now."--Kate Kellaway, The Observer (London)

"I like to find myself in the writing of Jenny Diski. In her wonderful memoir Skating to Antarctica I recognized her london, and saw her eccentric postwar childhood as a mirror of my own. Her adventure to the ice cap has since become a symbol of my generation's desire to catch the earth before it falls (and we fall with it). The Sixties offers another insightful and accurate mirror of my particular London mod genome, reflecting much of what I remember, and reminding me of much I had forgotten."--Pete Townshend

"Mordant, entertaining, and shot through with her customary dry wit, Jenny Diski's view of the sixties is free of the sentimentality that characterizes so many accounts of the decade. Her London life was crossed by many of the most interesting cultural currents of the era, and in this short, personal account she looks back at her younger self with a clear eye and an open mind."--Haruki Kunzru, author of My Revolutions


Product Details

  • Paperback: 160 pages
  • Publisher: Picador; First Edition edition (September 1, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312427212
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312427214
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.5 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,137,628 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Feminist [...], January 24, 2010
This review is from: The Sixties: Big Ideas, Small Books (Paperback)
Jenny Diski gave me more to contemplate in 134 pages of The Sixties than I could manage to willfully squeeze out of the last piece of popular literary fiction I read. It is clear after only a few sentences that Diski is a writer worth her salt, and why she was the one chosen to handle this topic.

Often the sixties are romanticized to the point of obscurity, those who lived through them trying to weave fame, and infamy, out of their psychedelic experiences. But it was also a time of astounding idealism, a time of rethinking and challenging ways of life, while communication between people and cultures flourished in a way previously unheard of before the expansion of global media.

Rebelling against abusive parents and already on the edge, Jenny Diski lived through the sixties in London, experiencing all that it had to offer. From the substances, to the sex, to the music; she helped found an alternative school and actively played her own role in the counter culture. Now, at sixty years old, she can see both the wonder and the naiveté of her generation:

Our youthful cruelty was boundless. Youth does cruelty quite easily, not having the accretions of time to deal with, but I remember a glaring clarity as I looked at the bourgeois life and its compromises...The compromises adults make cause much of the suffering in the world, or, at best, fail to deal with the suffering. Acceptance of one's lot--maintaining a silence about what can't be said, lowering your expectations for your own life and for others, and understanding that nothing about the way the world works will ever change-is the very marrow of maturity--and no wonder the newly fledged children look at it with horror and know that it won't happen to them--or turn their backs on it for fear it will.
She is nostalgic for the energy--and most of all for the music--but she contends that some of the most vital agendas were not only sidetracked, but were even inherently flawed. Free love was made possible by the presence of effective birth control and, she points out, central heating (especially in London). But the freedom of it was only for saying yes. Anyone who ever said no, was considered rude... (rude, can you imagine?). She describes feeling that you had to do it with anyone who asked, and that sometimes that wasn't really so hot for a woman eyeballing her evening's sweaty, overweight suitor. Communal living often failed simply because everyone was there to be free and to do their own thing, but "own thing became highly problematical when one's own thing clashed with someone else's..."

Picador is known for outstanding literature, and their Big Ideas/Small Books series is filled with gems. I am now determined to check out the other offerings, and maybe re-gift them as stocking-stuffers for my more discerning friends and family.

Review by Jen Wilson Lloyd
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3 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Brave New World...somewhat, October 13, 2009
This review is from: The Sixties: Big Ideas, Small Books (Paperback)
The Sixties was a rare time in history--remarkably, affluence had been achieved by more people in more societies than at any time previously. As a result, the people of the era could afford to agitate for luxuries like justice, art, and just having a good time. In a time of full employment, you could always go back to school, get a job fairly easily, or get a government subsidy of some sort. It's hard to imagine times like these from this vantage point.

The past, as has been opined, is a foreign country. Jenny Diski is an able guide to the times as experienced through her lens. Rather than a history, though, this is more of a personal memoir based around general themes of the times: drugs, education, the sexual revolution, etc. Her writing is peppered with the neat details which make her writing so delightful to read--in contrasting the period that had come before, she writes "The middle Sixties was that moment when Dorothy stepped through her front door, out of Kansas, onto the undreamed-of yellowness of the brick road on the way to the Emerald City, and the heart burst with pleasureat teh sudden busting out of a full-blown Technicolor world." This is a personal memoir, so the larger themes of the times are interspersed with personal anecdotes. There's a bit of a skew here then, towards her particular interests, such as education, which is fine. There were many Sixties.

One of Diski's concerns is that as the Sixties generation ages, as she ages, she drifts farther from that center of experience, dissolving in uncertain memory, and the present grows more 'baffling'. As a side note, this kind of 'decentering' is a kind of counterpoint to an issue she raises in her book--for most people the Sixties were 'business as usual,' involving 'getting on' in life. In a way, more of an extension of the attitudes of the '50s. One might ask--who 'owns' the Sixties...avant garde artists and 'revolutionaries', or a Nixonian 'Silent Majority?' For people who produce culture, this isn't much of a question, but the Silent Majority is marginalized, sadly, for its silence, as much as for its desire that everybody else would be silent, too.

It's interesting to compare this memoir to that of Mark Rudd, which I also reviewed. 'Underground' hits on many of the same themes of the times, from the perspective of a 'revolutionary leader.' The most immediate difference is the social ferment in the U.S. as compared to the U.K., particularly surrounding the anti-war movement. The analysis of the 'failure' of this historical moment is also similar.

The Sixties is a story with an unhappy ending. The peace and justice movements earlier in the era eventually dissolve into the freewheeling hedonism of the '70s and finally crash into the desperate, meaner '80s--individualism taken to its Toquevillian degree zero, with not nearly enough resources to go around and those that are diverted to a WWF-like military industrial complex, social energy dissipates, sinister new diseases like AIDS arise, and the table for 'winner take all' globalism is set for the '90s, and beyond.
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