Gangland: The Revised Edition: Cultural elites and the new generationalism
By (Author) Mark Davis
Allen & Unwin
Allen & Unwin
1st July 1999
Australia
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
300
416
Width 130mm, Height 195mm
504g
Panics over the culture wars, political correctness and victim feminism, rap music, ecstasy and body piercings . . . our cultural landscape is currently peppered with examples of a desperately backward-looking stasis and a fearful hanging-on.
In Gangland Mark Davis analyses the dated ideals and assumptions of Australia's cultural establishment, and their near monopoly on cultural debate. Who are these people What do they do How is their influence affecting public forums and the media Where does that leave the young people of today
Davis's irreverent prose cuts across the moral panics and anxieties that characterise Australian culture to detect a deep-seated fear of change - a fear that is often expressed as hostility towards youth. Gangland names names and maps networks, laying bare the discrepancies between reality and the images peddled by some of Australia's most popular thinkers, questioning the ideas that have characterised Australia in the nineties.
'Deserves to become a manifesto for a disenfranchised generation' Australian Financial Review
'Finally somebody on the side of late teens and twentysomethings in Australia . . . [a] brilliant argument of a book' Adrian Smart, Cream
'Gangland has sparked a valuable debate, one which I've been looking forward to for years' Kathy Bail, Australian Book Review
Mark Davis teaches in the School of Culture and Communication at the University of Melbourne. He is the co-editor (with Miriam Lyons) of More Than Luck: Ideas Australia Needs Now, and the author of The Land of Plenty: Australia in the 2000s.