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Smoking Typewriters - The Sixties Underground Press and the Rise of Alternative Media in America (Hardcover)
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Smoking Typewriters - The Sixties Underground Press and the Rise of Alternative Media in America (Hardcover)
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How did the New Left uprising of the 1960s happen? What caused
millions of young people-many of them affluent and college
educated-to suddenly decide that American society needed to be
completely overhauled? In Smoking Typewriters, historian John
McMillian shows that one answer to these questions can be found in
the emergence of a dynamic underground press in the 1960s.
Following the lead of papers like the Los Angeles Free Press, the
East Village Other, and the Berkeley Barb, young people across the
country launched hundreds of mimeographed pamphlets and flyers,
small press magazines, and underground newspapers. New and cheap
printing technologies had democratized the publishing process, and
by the decade's end the combined circulation of underground papers
stretched into the millions. Though not technically illegal, these
papers were often genuinely subversive, and many who produced and
sold them-on street-corners, at poetry readings, gallery openings,
and coffeehouses-became targets of harassment from local and
federal authorities. With writers who actively participated in the
events they described, underground newspapers captured the
zeitgeist of the '60s, speaking directly to their readers, and
reflecting and magnifying the spirit of cultural and political
protest. McMillian gives special attention to the ways underground
newspapers fostered a sense of community and played a vital role in
shaping the New Left's "movement culture." By putting the
underground press at the forefront, McMillian underscores the
degree to which the political energy of the 1960s emerged from the
grassroots, rather than the national office of Students for a
Democratic Society (SDS), which historians of the era typically
highlight. Deeply researched and eloquently written, Smoking
Typewriters captures all the youthful idealism and vibrant tumult
of the 1960s as it delivers a brilliant reappraisal of the origins
and development of the New Left rebellion.
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