LEADER 00000cam 2200517 i 4500 001 ocn863196284 003 OCoLC 005 20140903145531.0 008 140204s2014 mnuaf b s000 0 eng 010 2014001752 016 7 016715329|2Uk 019 863200093|a863200116 020 9780816681204|q(hbk. : acid-free paper) 020 0816681201|q(hbk. : acid-free paper) 020 9780816681211|q(pbk. : acid-free paper) 020 081668121X|q(pbk. : acid-free paper) 035 (OCoLC)863196284|z(OCoLC)863200093|z(OCoLC)863200116 040 DLC|beng|erda|cDLC|dYDX|dBTCTA|dYDXCP|dBDX|dUKMGB|dOCLCO |dCOO|dOKU|dCDX|dZCU|dOCLCF|dPUL|dWHP 042 pcc 049 WHPP 050 00 AC8|b.W665 2014 082 00 081|223 084 SOC022000|aSOC028000|aMUS020000|2bisacsh 100 1 Willis, Ellen,|eauthor. 245 14 The essential Ellen Willis /|cEllen Willis ; Nona Willis Aronowitz, editor ; with contributions from Spencer Ackerman, Stanley Aronowitz, Irin Carmon, Ann Friedman, Cord Jefferson, and Sara Marcus. 264 1 Minneapolis :|bUniversity of Minnesota Press,|c[2014] 300 xv, 513 pages, 12 pages of unnumbered plates : |billustrations ;|c25 cm 336 text|2rdacontent 337 unmediated|2rdamedia 338 volume|2rdacarrier 504 Includes bibliographical references. 505 00 |tTranscendence /|rNona Willis Aronowitz --|tThe sixties : up from radicalism --|tUp from radicalism : a feminist journal (US Magazine, 1969) --|tDylan (Cheetah, 1967) -- |tThe cultural revolution saved from drowning (The New Yorker, September 1969) --|tWomen and the myth of consumerism (Ramparts, 1970) --|tTalk of the town : hearing (The New Yorker, February 1969) --|tThe seventies : exile on Main Street --|tBeginning to see the light (Village Voice, 1977) --|tJanis Joplin (Rolling Stone Illustrated History of Rock 'n' Roll, 1980) --|tClassical and baroque sex in everyday life (Village Voice, May 1979) --|tMemoirs of a non-prom queen (Rolling Stone, August 1976) --|tThe trial of Arline Hunt (Rolling Stone, 1975) - -|tAbortion : is a woman a person? (Village Voice, March and April 1979) --|tFeminism, moralism, and pornography (Village Voice, October and November 1979) --|tThe family : love it or leave it (Village Voice, September 1979) -- |tTom Wolfe's failed optimism (Village Voice, 1977) -- |tThe velvet underground (Stranded, by Greil Marcus, 1979) --|tNext year in Jerusalem (Rolling Stone, April 1977) -- |tThe eighties : coming down again --|tToward a feminist sexual revolution (Social Text, Fall 1982) --|tLust horizons : is the women's movement pro-sex? (Village Voice, June 1981) --|tThe last unmarried person in America (Village Voice, July 1981) --|tTeenage sex : a modesty proposal (Village Voice, October 1986) --|tSisters under the skin? : confronting race and sex (Village Voice Literary Supplement, June 1982) --|tRadical feminism and feminist radicalism (Social Text, Summer 1984) --|tEscape from New York (Village Voice, July 1981) --|tComing down again : after the age of excess (Village Voice, January 1989) --|tThe drug war : from vision to vice (Village Voice, April 1986) --|tThe drug war : hell no, I won't go (Village Voice, September 1989) --|tThe diaper manifesto : we need a child-rearing movement (Village Voice, July 1986) --|tTo Emma, with love (Village Voice, December 1989) --|tThe nineties : decade of denial --|tSelections from Decade of denial (Don't Think, Smile!, 2000) -- |tEnding poor people as we know them (Village Voice, December 1994) --|tWhat we don't talk about when we talk about The bell curve (Don't Think, Smile!, 2000) -- |tRodney King's revenge (Don't Think, Smile!, 2000) -- |tMillion man mirage (Village Voice, November 1995) -- |tMonica and Barbara and primal concerns (The New York Times, March 1999) --|tVillains and victims (Don't Think, Smile!, 2000) --|t'Tis pity he's a whore (Don't Think, Smile!, 2000) --|tIs motherhood moonlighting? (Newsday, March 1991) --|tSay it loud : out of wedlock and proud (Newsday, February 1994) --|tBring in the noise (The Nation, April 1996) --|tIntellectual work in the culture of austerity (Don't Think, Smile!, 2000) --|tThe aughts : our politics, ourselves --|tWhy I'm not for peace (Radical Society, April 2002) --|tConfronting the contradictions (Dissent, Summer 2003) --|tThe mass psychology of terrorism (Implicating Empire, edited by Stanley Aronowitz, Heather Gautney, and Clyde W. Barrow, 2003) --|tDreaming of war (The Nation, September 2001) --|tFreedom from religion (The Nation, February 2001) --|tOur mobsters, ourselves (The Nation, March 2001) --|tIs there still a Jewish question? : why I'm an anti-anti-Zionist (Wrestling with Zion /|redited by Tony Kushner and Alisa Solomon, |t2003) --|tGhosts, fantasies, and hope (Dissent, Fall 2005) --|tEscape from freedom : what's the matter with Tom Frank? (and the lefties who love him) (Situations, 2006) - -|tThree elegies for Susan Sontag (New Politics, Summer 2005) --|tSelections from "The cultural unconscious in American politics : why we need a Freudian left". 520 "Out of the Vinyl Deeps, published in 2011, introduced a new generation to the incisive, witty, and merciless voice of Ellen Willis through her pioneering rock music criticism. In the years that followed, Willis's daring insights went beyond popular music, taking on such issues as pornography, religion, feminism, war, and drugs. The Essential Ellen Willis gathers writings that span forty years and are both deeply engaged with the times in which they were first published and yet remain fresh and relevant amid today's seemingly intractable political and cultural battles. Whether addressing the women's movement, sex and abortion, race and class, or war and terrorism, Willis brought to each a distinctive attitude--passionate yet ironic, clear-sighted yet hopeful. Offering a compelling and cohesive narrative of Willis's liberationist "transcendence politics," the essays--among them previously unpublished and uncollected pieces--are organized by decade from the 1960s to the 2000s, with each section introduced by young writers who share Willis's intellectual bravery, curiosity, and lucidity: Irin Carmon, Spencer Ackerman, Cord Jefferson, Ann Friedman, and Sara Marcus. The Essential Ellen Willis concludes with excerpts from Willis's unfinished book about politics and the cultural unconscious, introduced by her longtime partner, Stanley Aronowitz. An invaluable reckoning of American society since the 1960s, this volume is a testament to an iconoclastic and fiercely original voice. "--|cProvided by publisher. 650 0 American essays. 650 7 SOCIAL SCIENCE / Popular Culture.|2bisacsh 650 7 SOCIAL SCIENCE / Women's Studies.|2bisacsh 650 7 MUSIC / History & Criticism.|2bisacsh 700 1 Ackerman, Spencer,|econtributor. 700 1 Aronowitz, Stanley.,|econtributor. 700 1 Carmon, Irin,|econtributor. 700 1 Friedman, Ann,|econtributor. 700 1 Jefferson, Cord,|econtributor. 700 1 Marcus, Sara,|d1977-|econtributor. 700 1 Aronowitz, Nona Willis,|d1984-|eeditor. 994 02|bWHP
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