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The Great Funk: Falling Apart and Coming Together (on a Shag Rug) in the Seventies

The Great Funk: Falling Apart and Coming Together (on a Shag Rug) in the Seventies

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Author: Thomas Hine
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Category: Book

List Price: $30.00
Buy New: $5.65
You Save: $24.35 (81%)



New (22) Used (16) from $4.15

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 9 reviews
Sales Rank: 371469

Media: Hardcover
Pages: 256
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.8
Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 7.6 x 0.7

ISBN: 0374148392
Dewey Decimal Number: 973.924
EAN: 9780374148393
ASIN: 0374148392

Publication Date: November 13, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Direct From Distributor - Light Shelf Wear - No Remainder Mark

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
In the sixties, as the nation anticipated the conquest of space, the defeat of poverty, and an end to injustice at home and abroad, no goal seemed beyond America’s reach.
Then the seventies arrived—bringing oil shocks and gas lines, the disgrace and resignation of a president, defeat in Vietnam, terrorism at the 1972 Munich Olympics, urban squalor, bizarre crimes, high prices, and a bad economy. The country fell into a great funk.
But when things fall apart, you can take the fragments and make something fresh. Avocado kitchens and Earth Shoes may have been ugly, but they signaled new modes of seeing and being. The first generation to see Earth from space found ways to make life’s everyday routines—eating, keeping warm, taking out the trash—meaningful, both personally and globally. And many decided to reinvent themselves.
In Populuxe, a “textbook of consumerism in the Push Button Age” (Alan J. Adler, Los Angeles Times), Thomas Hine scrutinized the looks and life of the 1950s and 1960s, revealing the hopes and fears expressed in that era’s design. In the same way, The Great Funk: Falling Apart and Coming Together (on a Shag Rug) in the Seventies maps a complex era by looking at its ideas, feelings, sex, fashions, textures, gestures, colors, demographic forces, artistic expressions, and other phenomena that shaped our lives. Hine gets into the shoes and heads of those who experienced the seventies—exploring their homes, feeling the beat of their music, and scanning the ads that incited their desires.
But The Great Funk is more than a lavish catalogue of seventies culture: it’s a smart, informed, lively look at the “Me decade” through the eyes of the man House & Garden called “America’s sharpest design critic.”



Customer Reviews:   Read 4 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars The Great Funk gets it   September 30, 2008
M. hampton
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Finally, a book on the 1970s that gets a larger theme beyond watergate and inflation. The Great Funk is about ideas, consciousness and meaning. The Great Funk is the book that gets at the meaning of polyester and WIN buttons: the great theme of the big funk. One of the reasons for this is that its author is a sober, serious historian who is also a design critic. Hine gets that things like fashion and design can reflect profound changes in consciousness. To my mind he is the first author to try and make sense of that decade's fashion choices. Hine's book is dense with information and is an absolute must for anyone interested in the 1970s and above all, for anyone sick of the standard baby boomer narrative of history that we've been stuck with for the past thirty years.


3 out of 5 stars good oversight of the 70's   March 20, 2008
William D. Tompkins (New York, New York USA)
The author provides a good oversight of the 70's, with respect to fashion, music, attitude, politics, crime--pretty much all of life's bulletpoints. A pretty decent book. Written in a textbook style.


3 out of 5 stars Interesting But Superficial Dissection of the 1970s   January 18, 2008
R. C Sheehy (Foxboro,MA USA)
This book reads as a very interesting dissection of the 1970's and offers some interesting insights into what made the 70's so memorable. The book does a great job of rehashing many of the memorable snippets of the decade like shag carpeting and pet rocks. It also does a decent job of profiling some of the significant political crisis of the era like Watergate, the Oil Shock and the Hostage Crisis.

Still it fails to a large degree because it is so disjointed and doesn't try to tie together all it's various stories into one piece. It's all over the place and is just a jumble of 1970s snapshots. So it's a fun read but don't expect a deeper understanding of the 1970s from it.



4 out of 5 stars Memories in Context   January 15, 2008
M. Detwiler (Wilmington, DE USA)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Memories are very personal things. We see snapshots in our brains of where we were, how we felt, how others looked, and what we saw and heard. For those of us who were going to school, getting married, finding a job, and just surviving the 70's, our memories of the times are very self-centered.

Along comes Thomas Hine to put it into context. Joined by great, embarrassing photos of the times, Hine's social commentary explains much of what we remember. A lot more happened in the 70s than bad hair, awful colors, and ridiculous outfits. That macramed plant hanger? Everyone had plants hanging around, because they provided insulation from the impersonal world of work. If we didn't have plants, it was because we didn't think we could commit to keeping them alive. Thus the Pet Rock. Yet as silly as that now seems, the Pet Rock represents a time of single adults living alone. It was in the 70s that generations split up. Grandma, Mom and Daughter started living in three separate homes, a phenomenon which continues today. The now ubiquitous pantsuit is also from the 70s, as women entered the workforce in droves. Research on solar panels began during that time of gas shortages. The demise of job security came as Baby Boomers entered the workforce with five applicants for every job.

Sure, we remember peasant shirts, leisure suits, maxiskirts, and green and gold appliances. I still have the red-copper colored crockpot wedding present. But it wasn't until I read The Great Funk that the episodic memories in my brain began to blend into a picture of the decade I became an adult. Thanks, Thomas Hine.



5 out of 5 stars Remembering a decade we'd like to forget   January 4, 2008
Jon Hunt (Old Greenwich, Ct. USA)
3 out of 3 found this review helpful

Toward the end of Thomas Hine's terrific new book, "The Great Funk", he reminds us that even after 225 pages of historical remembrances about the Seventies, this was a truly awful decade. For those of us who came of age then, Hine's offering is a cheerful, if whimsical look back...for others who were not alive at the time, this may be the best (and only) chance to get to know it.

"The Great Funk" is such a pleasure to read because it has a Seventies' "look" about it. Stylized with photos that have no uniformed place, this is a book mostly about culture. The "funk" part certainly involved our leaders at the time who gave us no hope or inspiration....the conniving Richard Nixon, the likeable but ineffectual Gerald Ford and the negative, pessimistic Jimmy Carter. No wonder Hine marks the end of the decade with the inauguration of Ronald Reagan in early 1981. While it can be said that the decade was an outgrowth of the Sixties and led in some ways into the mechanized Eighties, the Seventies was a time that's hard to pigeonhole or even characterize as much more than a mishmash of clashing culture. And yet, through it all, the author has captured whatever essence those years had with a distinct clarity. I highly recommend "The Great Funk"...it may just cheer you into reality.


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