1st Edition

The Age of Happy Problems

Edited By Herbert Gold Copyright 2002
258 Pages
by Routledge

260 Pages
by Routledge

238 Pages
by Routledge

In his first book of non-fiction, originally published in 1962, Herbert Gold explores some not-so-happy problems confronting people in an age of "mass destruction, mass inertia, mass everything." While acknowledging that we live in a time of utmost global significance-war on an enormous scale was a reality of the twentieth century and continues to threaten, unadulterated evil has exhibited itself... Read more
PART I: AMERICAN EVENTS The Age of Happy Problems, How to be an Artist’s Wife M, Divorce as a Moral Act, The Bachelor’s Dilemma, The Mystery of Personality in the Novel, The Fair Apple of Progress, The New Upper-Middle Soap Opera, Hip, Cool, Beat, and Frantic, 1. The American as Hipster 2. Hip, Cool, Beat, and Frantic 3. The Rise of the Treeniks Fiction of the Sixties, A Dog in Brooklyn, a Girl in Detroit: A Life Among the Humanities PART II: AMERICAN PLACES, Paris: Notes from La Vie de Bohéme (Avec Tout Conforts), Cleveland: Inflation-on-the-Erie, Haiti: Americans in the Port of Princes, Reno: The Great Divide, Greenwich Village: The Changing Village, Death in Miami Beach

Biography

Herbert Gold