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Paperback Hippie Dictionary: A Cultural Encyclopedia of the 1960s and 1970s Book

ISBN: 1580085474

ISBN13: 9781580085472

Hippie Dictionary: A Cultural Encyclopedia of the 1960s and 1970s

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Whether you lived through the sixties and seventies or just wish you had, this revised and expanded edition of the Hippie Dictionary entertains as much as it educates.

Cultural and political listings such as "Age of Aquarius," "Ceasar Chavez," and "Black Power Movement," plus popular phrases like "acid flashback," "get a grip," and "are you for real?" will remind you of how revolutionary those 20 years were.

Although the hippie...

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Informative and Fun on That Era

If you want to learn more about the American counterculture of the 1960s and 70s, or of that era in general, this book is both very informative and a lot of fun. It's got all kinds of entries that were common topics at the time, from summaries about historical figures such as Martin Luther King, to slang terms for.....all sorts of things. Most of the book is arranged alphabetically, and at the end there's also some very helpful lists, such as important books, movies, civil rights leaders, and so on. At about 700 pages, there's plenty to peruse. Usually the entries are very satisfying, but there are a few cases where I wish the book would tell more. For instance, in the entry on Jerry Garcia of the rock group The Grateful Dead, McCleary states the great importance of Garcia to the hippie era, yet oddly he gives a short entry on him and refers the reader to other sources of information. But this is an exception. And McCleary tells it like it was, so anyone prudish about colorful language might be offended. I suspect that that and/or the liberal philosophy promoted herein is why some reviewers unfairly denounce this book. The author is himself an adherent to the 1960s counterculture ideals such as environmental protection, peace, non-materialism, tolerance of other cultures and beliefs, and other such radical notions, which he promotes in the book. Thus, anyone of a like mindset will find a kindred spirit here, and even if you disagree with its philosophy, this is still a good reference book and should be judged as such.

Farther out

I reviewed the first edition of this book on 27 August 2002 (about ten reviews down), so click through if you want to read what I originally wrote. This review is for the second edition.Here's all I'll say about the content: the revised and expanded edition, just like the first, is an extended argument for keeping The Dream alive. If, like me (and, obviously, John Bassett McCleary), you know there was something more to 'the Sixties' than a bunch of kids getting stoned and having sex, then you'll appreciate this book not only as a reference but as a 'tickler file' for your psyche.The main thing is, what's new in _this_ edition? Well, there are about fifty more pages of text. (The official page count has risen from 663 to 704. But the page numbering has also been adjusted: the entries. which used to start on page 12, now start on page 1 and the forematter is numbered with lowercase Roman numerals. By my count that's an increase of 52 pages.) As you'd expect, some entries are new and others are longer than they used to be.But probably the most important thing for you to know is that McCleary and/or his editor (Joan Jeffers McCleary) have gone over the earlier edition carefully and fixed the errors that have been noted in some of the earlier reviews of this book. There was, for example, some extraneous material included in the very first entry ('A'); now it's gone. The others -- all the ones I know about, anyway -- have been corrected.The McClearys deserve a big round of applause for the quick turnaround time. (The first edition is only two years old.) In my original review I rather unwillingly deducted maybe half a star for that stuff; it was obviously the result of deadline pressure, but this is still a reference book and factual mistakes count. In this review I'm happy to give the half-star back.Everything else I said in my earlier review still applies. As McCleary writes, our society threw the baby out with the bathwater in rejecting hippie ideals; what's most important here is to recognize the 1960s as a period of _experimentation_. Anybody who wants to devote some thoughtful attention to the results of those experiments will find plenty to think about in this book. There's a lot here, but there's nothing you need to 'believe' -- just take it seriously enough to let it roll it around in your mind for a while.With this edition a cool book has gotten cooler. Don't miss it.

Highly recommended!!!

Jam-packed (over 700 pages!) with fascinating info from a bygone era that vowed and did change our lives forever. The author has done a great job of capturing a lot of the excitement and turmoil that occurred and making us feel as if we were there! It's educational, it's entertaining, it's just a great book to learn more about the hippie era of the 60s. I'd highly recommend this book for anyone wanting to learn more about that period of time.

"Awesome"

This book is not only informative, it is pure entertainment! Fourteen friends and family members sitting around trying to "Stump the Dictionary". We couldn't. This book came through with flying colors! It had every expression, writer, political advocate (both male and female)included! The descriptions were accurate and informative. It is very interesting to see what each person remembers from their 60's-70's experiences. I can almost guarantee it will be included!!

Far out

I originally bought this book to share with my two daughters, who (at my wife's instigation) have lately taken to calling me "Hippie Dippie Joe." But it's so cool that I read and enjoyed it myself. John Bassett McCleary has done a nice job on this book. This isn't just a dictionary or a "hippie glossary"; though it includes lots of words and phrases from the common countercultural parlance of the 1960s and '70s, it also includes (short) historical and ideological summaries, together with some stuff you wouldn't expect to find in such a source. (Here's one example: McCleary quite rightly devotes many pages' worth of attention to the computer/Internet revolution, which probably a lot of people _still_ don't realize is part of the hippie legacy. McCleary has also starred the entries for the people he regards as most influential -- e.g. Dr. King -- and the words/phrases that have had the most impact -- e.g. "cool." And there are pages and pages and pages of lists at the back of the book.) There are a few glitches that force me to deduct a little bit from his rating. For example, McCleary consistently refers to Henry David Thoreau's essay "On the Duty of Civil Disobedience" as a "book" -- and, moreover, claims to have found the phrase "Question Authority" in it. This isn't a serious problem but there are enough little things like it that I can't award full points to what is, after all, supposed to be a reliable reference book. On the other hand, most of this stuff is so clearly the result of deadline pressure that I hate to deduct more than half a star, so let's just say I'm rating it at 4.5 stars. McCleary does pretty much everything else just right. I'd like to have seen a bit more about the influence of science fiction on 1960s ideals (and maybe even an entry on SF writer Spider Robinson, whose work deliberately and consistently embodies those ideals). But McCleary does work in some references to SF; indeed his list of relevant period literature includes not one but _two_ novels by Robert A. Heinlein. (He also makes liberal use of the term "grok," although his spelling of it is inconsistent.) And I agree with so many of McCleary's own evaluations that I wonder whether we've been reading each others' minds. His entries on, e.g., Stephen Gaskin, Willie Nelson, and James Taylor are just right, and his entry on the meaning of "true hippie" is smack on the mark. (And I'm glad he kept his historical summaries short; the book would have swelled to unmanageable size if he'd devoted more than a paragraph or two to each event.) In short, this isn't just a reference; it's an extended argument for keeping The Dream alive. As McCleary writes under the entry for "true hippie," if the world had listened to the hippies thirty years ago, 9/11 wouldn't have happened. (And of course I do mean "the world," including especially the terrorists themselves.) In that spirit -- keeping the fire alive, that is -- you may want to pick up Skip Stone's uneven _Hippies A
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