By the late 1970s, drugs, blue jeans, rock and roll, and sexual
precocity appeared to be all that remained of the cultural ferment
of the 1960s. In this classic new study of high school-aged youth
in the eartly 70s, Gary Schwartz reveals subtle yet significant
changes in the style of deviance in adolescent culture. He argues
that a new sort of peer-group pluralism emerged from the
counter-culture movement of the 60s, a deviance defined less by
persistent violations of the law than by disengagement from
traditional images of success and civic responsibility.
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