The Making Of A Counter Culture by Theodore Roszak
Reflections on the Technocratic Society and Its Youthful Opposition
A passionate analysis of the 1960s upheaval arguing that the era’s youth movements—students, hippies, and antiwar activists—represented a coherent challenge to modern technocratic society. It traces the revolt’s roots in institutional alienation and critiques of scientific rationalism and bureaucracy, showing how demands for personal autonomy, spiritual exploration, and new forms of community aimed at deeper changes in values and consciousness rather than only political reform. The work frames the countercultural surge as both a symptom of and potential corrective to the dehumanizing effects of industrial modernity.
The 14160th greatest book of all time
- Published
- 1969
- Nationality
- American
- Length
- Moderate
- Pages
- 400-450
- Original Language
- English
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- Alternate Titles
- None
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This book is on the following 1 lists:
- An Expert's 200-Book List (The Detroit Free Press)
