Getting Loose: Lifestyle Consumption in the 1970sDuke University Press, 2007 M04 27 - 310 páginas From “getting loose” to “letting it all hang out,” the 1970s were filled with exhortations to free oneself from artificial restraints and to discover oneself in a more authentic and creative life. In the wake of the counterculture of the 1960s, anything that could be made to yield to a more impulsive vitality was reinvented in a looser way. Food became purer, clothing more revealing, sex more orgiastic, and home decor more rustic and authentic. Through a sociological analysis of the countercultural print culture of the 1970s, Sam Binkley investigates the dissemination of these self-loosening narratives and their widespread appeal to America’s middle class. He describes the rise of a genre of lifestyle publishing that emerged from a network of small offbeat presses, mostly located on the West Coast. Amateurish and rough in production quality, these popular books and magazines blended Eastern mysticism, Freudian psychology, environmental ecology, and romantic American pastoralism as they offered “expert” advice—about how to be more in touch with the natural world, how to release oneself into trusting relationships with others, and how to delve deeper into the body’s rhythms and natural sensuality. Binkley examines dozens of these publications, including the Whole Earth Catalog, Rainbook, the Catalog of Sexual Consciousness, Celery Wine, Domebook, and Getting Clear. Drawing on the thought of Pierre Bourdieu, Zygmunt Bauman, and others, Binkley explains how self-loosening narratives helped the middle class confront the modernity of the 1970s. As rapid social change and political upheaval eroded middle-class cultural authority, the looser life provided opportunities for self-reinvention through everyday lifestyle choice. He traces this ethos of self-realization through the “yuppie” 1980s to the 1990s and today, demonstrating that what originated as an emancipatory call to loosen up soon evolved into a culture of highly commercialized consumption and lifestyle branding. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-5 de 77
... society to the individualistic and inventive forms we know today . An old axiom of the sociological tradition tells the story : where in traditional soci- eties individuals were embedded in relatively stable social networks in 6 ...
... societies for a very long time — a dy- namic of modernity ( in a phase variously designated with adjectives and pre- fixes such as late , liquid , reflexive , or post- ) in which the constraints of tradition are severed in the name of ...
... societies , was resolved , however tenuously , in the project of becoming loose as a narrative of changing selfhood — a reflexive storying of the self.16 In this regard , the how and the why questions posed earlier come together in an ...
... society — a white middle class in which heteronormative and patriarchal sexual and gender norms pre- vailed.19 The modernity in question is their modernity , and the anxieties and dreams it evoked were the dreams particular to this ...
... society and only sparse investment in the promise of self - transformation in a shared future . Today , even as the ethical injunction to loosen up has lost its capacity to invigorate moral discourse , shades of its former meaning ...
Contenido
1 | |
Middle Class in the Maelstrom | 25 |
Caring Texts | 127 |
Morning in America Pulling in the Slack | 243 |
Notes | 251 |
Bibliography | 263 |
Index | 287 |