Books
Richard Vinen

1968

A major new history of one of the seminal years in the postwar world, when rebellion and disaffection broke out on an extraordinary scale.
The year 1968 saw an extraordinary range of protests across much of the western world. Some of these were genuinely revolutionary—around ten million French workers went on strike and the whole state teetered on the brink of collapse. Others were more easily contained, but had profound longer-term implications—terrorist groups, feminist collectives, gay rights activists could all trace important roots to 1968.
1968 is a striking and original attempt half a century later to show how these events, which in some ways still seem so current, stemmed from histories and societies which are in practice now extraordinarily remote from our own time. 1968 pursues the story into the 1970s to show both the ever more violent forms of radicalization that stemmed from 1968 and the brutal reaction that brought the era to an end.
556 printed pages
Original publication
2018
Publication year
2018
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Quotes

  • Yana Manukhinahas quoted3 years ago
    The fact that political rebellion should so often have erupted at a time when a large cohort of the population was around the age of twenty, and that it so often coincided with educational expansion and the growth of a ‘youth culture’, is significant.
  • Yana Manukhinahas quoted3 years ago
    The radicalism of the late 1960s often emerged out of reformism earlier in the decade and it sometimes blended back into more conventional kinds of politics – or labour organization – later in the 1970s.
  • Yana Manukhinahas quoted3 years ago
    his lover, like many intelligent Czechs, simply assumed that every word emanating from the regime was the exact opposite of the truth and, therefore, that American intervention in Vietnam must be a good thing

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