[THS] Review: What Really Happened to the 1960s

The Harder Stuff in news and commentary ths at psalience.org
Sun Jan 30 17:06:50 CET 2011


What Really Happened to the 1960s: How Mass Media Culture Failed American
Democracy
by Edward P. Morgan

Review from MCM newsletter

Wherever we turn these days, we encounter reminders of the sixties. They're invoked
in presidential campaigns, American military actions, and outbursts of mass protest.
We're bombarded with media-saturated anniversaries of iconic events, from JFK's
inauguration (and assassination) to urban riots and Woodstock. But as Edward
Morgan suggests, these references offer little more than an endless stream of
distracting imagery that has more to do with today's politics and economics than with
the reality of yesterday's social movements.

In his provocative look at mass media's connection with those turbulent years,
Morgan simultaneously seeks to explain what happened in the 1960s and what
happened to how we remember it. His comprehensive overview and critical analysis
reveal how the mass media have shaped the popular image of a raucous decade in
ways that have curtailed its promise of democracy.

Morgan's in-depth study of sixties social movements and their depictions in corporate
America's print media, film, and television helps to explain why the past still provokes
deep emotions--even antagonism--half a century later. He blends history, sociology,
political science, media and cultural studies, and critical theory to explain why the
1960s have been so virulently targeted, particularly by critics on the right who blame
today's self-indulgent culture on baby boomers and "sixties permissiveness" instead
of the real culprits: consumer-driven capitalism and neoliberal politics.

Emphasizing the tensions between capitalism and democracy, Morgan investigates
the fate of democracy in our media-driven culture, first by examining the ways that
the 1960s were represented in the media at the time, then by exploring how popular
versions of the sixties have glossed over their more radically democratic qualities in
favor of sensationalism and ideological constructions. He reminds us of what really
happened--then shows us how the media trivialized and satirized those events, co-
opting and commercializing the decade's legacy and, in doing so, robbing it of its
more radical, democratic potential.


By revisiting this chapter of the past, Morgan shows that it has much to tell us about
where we are today and how we got here. Whether you lived through the sixties or
only read about them--or only saw Hollywood's version of them in Forrest Gump--this
book will put their lessons in clearer perspective.



More information about the THS mailing list