Like A Summer With A Thousand Julys

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Political Science, Government, Communism & Socialism
Cover of the book Like A Summer With A Thousand Julys by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise, Bread and Circuses
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Dave Wise, Stuart Wise ISBN: 9781625178862
Publisher: Bread and Circuses Publication: November 30, 2015
Imprint: Bread and Circuses Language: English
Author: Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
ISBN: 9781625178862
Publisher: Bread and Circuses
Publication: November 30, 2015
Imprint: Bread and Circuses
Language: English
Now into their late 60's, and still working the buildings with the same London gang they’ve been with since the late 70's, key King Mob faces Dave and Stuart Wise have never stopped writing and agitating, and this, a companion volume to last years' warmly received 'King Mob: A Critical Hidden History', pulls together polemics, reflections, and righteous rants from the last 30 years. Opening up with 'Like A Summer With A 1000 July's' extensive, sideways look at the wave of urban insurrection that swept inner city UK in 1981; debunking punk’s ‘situationist myth’ in 'The End Of Music', and a brief, but definitive look at the glorious ‘King Mob/Father Xmas at Selfridges’ prank of 1968. 'Nietzsche: Revolutionary' looks at the much revered/contested philosopher as "a reluctant communist", "proto ecologist" and "brother Hegelian. Separate chapters look back with affection and honesty at old friends, comrades and English Situationist founders Ralph Rumney and Alexander Trocchi respectively. Along the way, shards of surrealism cut through: the assault on art "in the great mod battle of Keswick”, when “a travelling theatre was again torched,” or the Dadaist guerrilla flavoured August ‘81 bank holiday attack when "the model railway station at Brighton was molotoved by white youths." And whilst an unwavering ideological perspective firmly rejects the stasis of the post war 'revolutionary left', just as it recoils in disgust at encroaching Neo Liberal barbarism, Dave Wise never shies away from reflecting on the personal, via the prism of the political : "Guy and Michele broke up around 1970…..everybody's relationship did, including my own; a break up…I never got over, and I've thought about my beloved Anne Ryder every day of my life since. These break-ups weren't about sexual difficulties or inadequacies nor about not being able to relate or even love, but finally about history and how the most profound revolt ever experienced failed so utterly, and the essential by-product of such failure was a psychosomatic pain so desperate it seemed in need of therapeutic treatment; a treatment simple warm cuddling and quiet affection couldn't match. We stormed and smashed open the gates of paradise to let in every exploited nutter who cared to join in... yet on the brink of utopia we were refused entry and where, just where, could you go from such a point of no return?"
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Now into their late 60's, and still working the buildings with the same London gang they’ve been with since the late 70's, key King Mob faces Dave and Stuart Wise have never stopped writing and agitating, and this, a companion volume to last years' warmly received 'King Mob: A Critical Hidden History', pulls together polemics, reflections, and righteous rants from the last 30 years. Opening up with 'Like A Summer With A 1000 July's' extensive, sideways look at the wave of urban insurrection that swept inner city UK in 1981; debunking punk’s ‘situationist myth’ in 'The End Of Music', and a brief, but definitive look at the glorious ‘King Mob/Father Xmas at Selfridges’ prank of 1968. 'Nietzsche: Revolutionary' looks at the much revered/contested philosopher as "a reluctant communist", "proto ecologist" and "brother Hegelian. Separate chapters look back with affection and honesty at old friends, comrades and English Situationist founders Ralph Rumney and Alexander Trocchi respectively. Along the way, shards of surrealism cut through: the assault on art "in the great mod battle of Keswick”, when “a travelling theatre was again torched,” or the Dadaist guerrilla flavoured August ‘81 bank holiday attack when "the model railway station at Brighton was molotoved by white youths." And whilst an unwavering ideological perspective firmly rejects the stasis of the post war 'revolutionary left', just as it recoils in disgust at encroaching Neo Liberal barbarism, Dave Wise never shies away from reflecting on the personal, via the prism of the political : "Guy and Michele broke up around 1970…..everybody's relationship did, including my own; a break up…I never got over, and I've thought about my beloved Anne Ryder every day of my life since. These break-ups weren't about sexual difficulties or inadequacies nor about not being able to relate or even love, but finally about history and how the most profound revolt ever experienced failed so utterly, and the essential by-product of such failure was a psychosomatic pain so desperate it seemed in need of therapeutic treatment; a treatment simple warm cuddling and quiet affection couldn't match. We stormed and smashed open the gates of paradise to let in every exploited nutter who cared to join in... yet on the brink of utopia we were refused entry and where, just where, could you go from such a point of no return?"

More books from Communism & Socialism

Cover of the book Caravana de la Libertad: la Revolución Cubana by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
Cover of the book Populating No Man’s Land by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
Cover of the book Obras de José Carlos Mariátegui by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
Cover of the book Learning from the West? by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
Cover of the book Maurice Thorez by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
Cover of the book Works of Edward Bellamy by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
Cover of the book Hybrid Media Activism by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
Cover of the book The Failure of Socialism in South Korea by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
Cover of the book Remembering Tomorrow by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
Cover of the book Party Hegemony and Entrepreneurial Power in China by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
Cover of the book Le premier printemps de Prague by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
Cover of the book Syriza by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
Cover of the book State Capitalism and World Revolution by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
Cover of the book In Defence of Democracy: Dynamics and Fault Lines of Nepal's Political Economy by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
Cover of the book I Was in Prison with Cardinal Mindszenty by Dave Wise, Stuart Wise
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy