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  • Published: 15 September 2012
  • ISBN: 9781590175811
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 312
  • RRP: $49.99

Growing Up Absurd

Problems of Youth in the Organized Society




Paul Goodman’s Growing Up Absurd was a runaway best seller when it was first published in 1960, and it became one of the defining texts of the New Left. Goodman was a writer and thinker who broke every mold and did it brilliantly—he was a novelist, poet, and a social theorist, among a host of other things—and the book’s surprise success established him as one of America’s most unusual and trenchant critics, combining vast learning, an astute mind, utopian sympathies, and a wonderfully hands-on way with words.

For Goodman, the unhappiness of young people was a concentrated form of the unhappiness of American society as a whole, run by corporations that provide employment (if and when they do) but not the kind of meaningful work that engages body and soul. Goodman saw the young as the first casualties of a humanly re­pressive social and economic system and, as such, the front line of potential resistance.

Noam Chomsky has said, “Paul Goodman’s impact is all about us,” and certainly it can be felt in the powerful localism of today’s renascent left. A classic of anarchist thought, Growing Up Absurd not only offers a penetrating indictment of the human costs of corporate capitalism but points the way forward. It is a tale of yesterday’s youth that speaks directly to our common future.

  • Published: 15 September 2012
  • ISBN: 9781590175811
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 312
  • RRP: $49.99

Praise for Growing Up Absurd

  • "Goodman might be called an intuitive sociologist in his unconventional, erratic yet convincing analysis of the encouragement toward human waste that our wasteful society provides. Growing Up Absurd is his cruelly apt phrase for this fatal lack of purpose and idealism. If [John] Updike's anxiety for his fellow man is subtle, Goodman's angry polemic leaves us no doubt what makes Rabbit run." - The Washington Post

  • "The time is surely right for a Goodman revival. There are aspects of contemporary life that he anticipated and influenced--the gay rights movement, most notably--and others that are sorely in need of his wisdom. His most famous book, Growing Up Absurd, originally commissioned as a study of juvenile delinquency and later a bible of the 1960s student rebellion, remains essential and troubling reading for anyone who cares about the problems of the young." - A.O. Scott, The New York Times, 10/19/11 from the review of the film "Paul Goodman Changed My Life"
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