1996 and the End of History
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"1996 And The end of history examines the year as it panned out in the UK not just in politics but in music, light entertainment and sport. It was the zenith of a decade which will go down as remarkably untroubled bymodern standards; following the collapse of the Berlin Wall, prior to 9/11, in which political conditions of peace and apparent economic prosperity created an overall mood of frivolity, postmodern anti-seriousness and a desire to get back to sunnier times before the grim onset of the strife-ridden 70's and 80's. 1996 could be seen in the UK as a subconscious recreation of the year 1966: the England football team seeking similar glory at Wembley Stadium in Euro '96; Tony Blair representing the white heat of an incoming Labour government after many years of Tory rule à la Harold Wilson; Oasis's absolute dominance, a throwback to the monomania surrounding the Beatles. However, the author argues, the mood of retrograde optimism was a distraction, the feeling of prosperity a delusion, one compounded by the notion that now the End of History had arrived, so had the old oppositions of Left and Right; that we were entering post-political times. They were nothing of the kind, as the future we find ourselves in today confirms."--Back cover.
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- Open Author
Mark Perryman
- Open Author
David Stubbs
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