Angels & Genies

The Beatles Conspiracy/1st & 2nd Matrix Tango, Part Five

Angels & Genies

(Art by Michelle Horsley)

Part One

Part Two

Part Three

Part Four

The Final Nail

As a last pass at Ian MacDonald’s sterling intro to Revolution in the Head: McDonald makes a similar, if more succinct, case to that of Witcover’s 1968 (quoted last time), now peering through the pop cultural glass, and pointing out how the 1960s led inexorably to the 1980s and to a reassertion of authoritarianism, only now with an even more scientistic, narcissistic ruthlessness:

Thus, by a devilish paradox, those who thought they were at the cutting edge of social development in the Sixties—the hippies, the New Left—soon found themselves adrift in the wake of the real social avant-garde of the period: ordinary people. The individualism of the Me Decade, as Tom Wolfe dubbed the Seventies, was a creation of the Sixties’ mass mainstream, not of the peripheral groups which challenged it. Former hippies and radicals who abandoned the utopian “we” for rueful self-interest in the Seventies, far from leading public taste, were merely tagging along behind it. . . . [Thatcher] and her radicalized, post-consensus Conservative voters are the true heirs of the Sixties. They changed the world, not the hippies (and certainly not the New Left). What mass society unconsciously began in the Sixties, Thatcher and Reagan raised to the level of ideology in the Eighties: the complete materialistic individualization—and total fragmentation—of Western society. (p. 31, 32).

In summation, McDonald describes the “destabilizing social and psychological evolution” since the 60s as stemming