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Last Season of Innocence: The Teen Experience in the 1960s
Victor Brooks
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Description for Last Season of Innocence: The Teen Experience in the 1960s
Paperback. Last Season of Innocence discusses the lives of the preteens and teenagers who were in junior high school, high school, and the first year of college in the 1960s. Brooks offers a unique account of this much-chronicled decade by examining the experiences of these often overlooked young people. Num Pages: 216 pages. BIC Classification: 1KBB; 3JJPK; HBJK; HBTB; JFC; JFSP2. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 225 x 151 x 16. Weight in Grams: 331.
Last Season of Innocence discusses the lives of the preteens and teenagers who were in junior high school, high school, and the first year of college in the 1960s. These are the young people who read Seventeen and Mad, watched more television than their older siblings, and tended to listen to 45 rpm singles or mono LPs rather than the more sophisticated stereo albums of their older siblings. Substantial numbers of these teens could and did join political protests, but they also engaged in a more personal daily struggle with school dress codes and parental intrusion on social life. In a nation where a third of the population was under nineteen, they were hardly invisible, but their experience seems to have been marginalized by the twenty-somethings who largely redefined the meaning of the youth culture and took center stage in doing so. Brooks offers a unique account of the much-chronicled 1960s by examining the experiences of these preteens and teenagers.
Product Details
Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2015
Condition
New
Weight
331g
Number of Pages
216
Place of Publication
Lanham, MD, United States
ISBN
9781442255951
SKU
V9781442255951
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-15
About Victor Brooks
Victor Brooks is professor of history and education at Villanova University. He is the author of ten books, including Boomers: The Cold-War Generation Grows Up; The Fredericksburg Campaign, nominated for the Virginia Literary Prize; and Hell Is Upon Us: D-Day in the Pacific, a feature selection of the History Book Club.
Reviews for Last Season of Innocence: The Teen Experience in the 1960s
Brooks (history, Villanova Univ.; Boomers: The Cold War Generation Grows Up) here reviews the academic, social, and cultural experiences of American preteens and teenagers from 1960 to 1969. He organizes his book both chronologically and thematically to provide a narrative of the changes in teenage culture over the course of the decade. He ably compares the generally accepted historical narrative that focuses on political protest and psychedelic music with data such as music sales and radio charts, popular magazine features, and television ratings to show that, in fact, the experience of teenagers varied wildly throughout these years. A particular strength of the work is the author's focus on the early 1960s, as this period has had far less scholarly attention than the end of the decade. VERDICT There is a general note on sources, but no direct citations via endnotes, which may disappoint serious readers. However, while numerous other works have examined the cultural history of the 1960s, Brooks's book is one of the few to focus solely on the American teenager. As such, highly recommended for followers of modern American cultural history.
Library Journal
In Last Season of Innocence, Victor Brooks mines the collective memory of this generation as it traveled through the Sixties. From music to movies to television to politics to culture and lifestyle, this book conjures up stories, images, and references that will be immediately recognizable to anyone who lived through that breathtakingly vivid and transformational era.
Leonard Steinhorn, author, The Greater Generation: In Defense of the Baby Boom Legacy Now that the baby boomer generation has reached retirement age, a number of new works provide a reexamination of their teenage years. Many of these new books concentrate on the dramatic events that shaped the sixties. Brooks (Villanova Univ.), however, analyzes post-WW II teenagers as they experienced adolescence not as political activists or as the small number who were outliers, but from the perspectives of average middle-class children. He divides his work into two periods, 1959-64 and 1964-69, arguing that a substantial change occurred in the US in that ten-year period. One of those changes was that by the late 1960s, US culture and the economy revolved around young Americans, who accounted for 40 percent of the country's population. In 12 well-written chapters, Brooks focuses upon family life, high school, college, movies, and music. He concludes that the postwar teenagers received a better education than their parents, were the first generation exposed daily to an unpopular war, produced a more casual public culture than previously existed, and altered popular cultural media, especially music, more than any previous group of young people. Summing Up: Recommended.
CHOICE
Library Journal
In Last Season of Innocence, Victor Brooks mines the collective memory of this generation as it traveled through the Sixties. From music to movies to television to politics to culture and lifestyle, this book conjures up stories, images, and references that will be immediately recognizable to anyone who lived through that breathtakingly vivid and transformational era.
Leonard Steinhorn, author, The Greater Generation: In Defense of the Baby Boom Legacy Now that the baby boomer generation has reached retirement age, a number of new works provide a reexamination of their teenage years. Many of these new books concentrate on the dramatic events that shaped the sixties. Brooks (Villanova Univ.), however, analyzes post-WW II teenagers as they experienced adolescence not as political activists or as the small number who were outliers, but from the perspectives of average middle-class children. He divides his work into two periods, 1959-64 and 1964-69, arguing that a substantial change occurred in the US in that ten-year period. One of those changes was that by the late 1960s, US culture and the economy revolved around young Americans, who accounted for 40 percent of the country's population. In 12 well-written chapters, Brooks focuses upon family life, high school, college, movies, and music. He concludes that the postwar teenagers received a better education than their parents, were the first generation exposed daily to an unpopular war, produced a more casual public culture than previously existed, and altered popular cultural media, especially music, more than any previous group of young people. Summing Up: Recommended.
CHOICE