Review: Smoking Typewriters: The Sixties Underground Press and the Rise
of Alternative Media in America | GeekDad

Image: Oxford University Press

While I haven’t read it in years, I used to read the alternative media
magazine Utne Reader. In those pre-internet days, it was a great way to
get different information than was on the news or in the regular news
magazines. I was a college student and interested in things that were
out of the mainstream (as college students are wont to do).

These days, you can easily pick and choose your news sources on the
internet. Jon Stewart, Neatorama, Boing Boing, and, of course, GeekDad,
are all viable options for getting information. We’ve learned that the
regular news sources are just as fallible as anyone, so we choose to get
information from sources that think along the same lines we do.

Just as I and many others read the Utne Reader before the internet
became user-friendly, there was plenty of underground media before the
Utne Reader came along. The 1960s were a very important decade in this
movement. Going extensively into this time that (even for me who was not
yet born) feels so recent, yet was 40-50 years ago, is Smoking
Typewriters: The Sixties Underground Press and the Rise of Alternative
Media in America. This extensively researched book describes the decade
that helped pave the way to allow dissent and counter arguments in our
news and other information sources today. It is so full of specifics and
details that it can be a slow read, but it is obvious how much time and
care were put into constructing a cohesive narrative.

Smoking Typewriters reads like journalism, which is no surprise. The
book starts out telling how people got into creating underground
newspapers. Different papers each had a different focus. Some focused on
political issues. Some drugs. Some anti-war activism. The history of
specific groups and publications are discussed, including Students for a
Democratic Society (SDS), the Liberation News Service (LNS), the
Berkeley Tribe and The Village Voice.

Youth, the New Left and the counterculture were often organizing and
making things happen together as groups. Whether they were just stirring
things up or making real changes in our society (or plenty of both),
this book shows the motivation behind the people and the groups behind
the papers.

The books is filled with story after story, developments, papers, death
threats, brave people and countless fascinating glimpses into a side of
life that helped build alternative media as we know it today. And in
fact, the last chapter of the book goes into what has happened with the
underground and alternative press since the 1960s. Times and technology
have advanced, and the old underground papers that are still in
operation have changed focus. The times they are a-changin’.

If you’re looking for a journey through the 1960s in the world of
underground newspapers, learning about the people, groups and papers
involved, and to learn how they affect alternative media today, this
book will deliver.

Smoking Typewriters: The Sixties Underground Press and the Rise of
Alternative Media in America retails for $27.95 in hardback format, but
can be found considerably cheaper on Amazon.

Note: I received a copy of the book for review purposes.

--
http://m.wired.com/geekdad/2011/02/smoking-typewriters/
Via InstaFetch

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Sixties-L" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/sixties-l?hl=en.

Reply via email to