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Growing Up Absurd
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Growing Up Absurd Papeback -

by Paul Goodman

  • New

First published in 1960, this book takes the crisis of disaffected youth as indicative of the crisis within the culture at large, which Goodman describes as being run by corporations that provide employment (when they do) but not work in any meaningful sense, work that engages body and soul.

Description

The New York Review Books Incorporated , pp. 320 . Papeback. New.
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Details

  • Title Growing Up Absurd
  • Author Paul Goodman
  • Binding Papeback
  • Edition 1st Paperback Pr
  • Condition New
  • Pages 312
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher The New York Review Books Incorporated , NY
  • Date pp. 320
  • Features Price on Product - Canadian, Table of Contents
  • Bookseller's Inventory # 642178642
  • ISBN 9781590175811 / 1590175816
  • Weight 0.69 lbs (0.31 kg)
  • Dimensions 8 x 5.09 x 0.63 in (20.32 x 12.93 x 1.60 cm)
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 2012012241
  • Dewey Decimal Code 305.235

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From the publisher

Paul Goodman (1911–1972) was an American social critic, psychologist, poet, novelist, and anarchist. His writings appeared in Politics, Partisan Review, The New Republic, Commentary, The New Leader, Dissent, and The New York Review of Books. He published several well-regarded books in a variety of fields—including city planning, Gestalt therapy, literary criticism, and politics—before Growing Up Absurd, cancelled by its original publisher and turned down by a number of other  presses, was brought out by Random House in 1960.

Casey Nelson Blake is Professor of History and American Studies at Columbia University and the author of several studies in American intellectual and cultural history. He writes regularly for Commonweal, Dissent, Raritan, and other publications.

Susan Sontag (1933–2004) was a novelist, playwright, filmmaker, and one of the most influential critics of her generation. Her books include Against Interpretation, On Photography, Illness as Metaphor, and The Volcano Lover.

From the rear cover

In this book, the author assumes that the young really need a more worthwhile world in order to grow up at all, and confronts this real need with the world that they have been getting.

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Media reviews

Growing up Absurd by Paul Goodman… pretty much founded the modern passion for school reform.” – Paul Berman
 
“Paul Goodman, a man deeply dissatisfied with things as they are, deserves more attention than other less-conscientious objectors….His book is a highly serious effort to understand the relation between society and the disaffected youngster.” – John K. Galbraith, The New York Times
 
“Goodman might be called an intuitive sociologist in his unconventional, erratic yet convincing analysis of the encouragement toward human waste that our wasteful society provides. Growing Up Absurd is his cruelly apt phrase for this fatal lack of purpose and idealism. If [John] Updike’s anxiety for his fellow man is subtle, Goodman’s angry polemic leaves us no doubt what makes Rabbit run.” – The Washington Post, 1960
 
“His impact is all around us.” – Noam Chomsky
 
“Philosopher, poet, sociologist, pacifist, psychologist, writer, anarchist, open bisexual and spokesman for a generation. Paul Goodman ranked among the most influential thinkers in the latter half of the 20th century.” – Ronnie Scheib, Variety
 
“[The film] “Paul Goodman Changed My Life” pays tribute to a man—poet teacher social critic, guru without portfolio—whose name was once a household word and whose books were talismans of intellectual seriousness and social concern. His current obscurity is something this documentary, directed by Jonathan Lee and including eloquent testimony from friends, family and admirers, is determined to overcome….His most famous book, Growing Up Absurd, originally commissioned as a study of juvenile delinquency and later a bible of the 1960s student rebellion, remains essential and troubling reading for anyone who cares about the problems of the young.” – A.O. Scott, The New York Times, 10/19/11, from his review of the film "Paul  Goodman Changed My Life"
 
“Mr. Goodman is terrifying. Utopians usually are when we take them (or they take themselves) seriously. And  Goodman is all the more terrifying because he is a rational Utopian who has most of analytical apparatus and theoretical formulations of modern sociology, psychology, historiography and aesthetics at his finger tips.” – Webster Scott, The Nation
 
“The best analysis I have seen of the spiritual emptiness of our technological paradise.” – Sir Herbert Read
 
“Paul Goodman’s Growing Up Absurd is an extraordinary good and important book—the best book I know on the subject of youth….Goodman’s is a serious, profound and old-fashionedly moral book. With great originality and lucidity, he argues that the Organization Man, the beat and the juvenile delinquent are merely reactions to the same basic problem….” – Kenneth Keniston, The American Scholar

About the author

Paul Goodman (1911-1972) was an American social critic, psychologist, poet, novelist, and anarchist. His writings appeared in Politics, Partisan Review, The New Republic, Commentary, The New Leader, Dissent, and The New York Review of Books. He published several well-regarded books in a variety of fields--including city planning, Gestalt therapy, literary criticism, and politics--before Growing Up Absurd, cancelled by its original publisher and turned down by a number of other presses, was brought out by Random House in 1960.

Casey Nelson Blake is Professor of History and American Studies at Columbia University and the author of several studies in American intellectual and cultural history. He writes regularly for Commonweal, Dissent, Raritan, and other publications.

Susan Sontag (1933-2004) was a novelist, playwright, filmmaker, and one of the most influential critics of her generation. Her books include Against Interpretation, On Photography, Illness as Metaphor, and The Volcano Lover.