Tag: Eighties

Travels in My Eighties An Account of Twelve Travels Abroad during the Years of 2009-2012


Free Download Dermot Hope-Simpson, "Travels in My Eighties: An Account of Twelve Travels Abroad during the Years of 2009-2012"
English | 2014 | ISBN: 1496983327 | EPUB | pages: 272 | 20.7 mb
After my wife died, I decided to remain active, including travelling. This book is an account of twelve journeys I made over the four years since then, and it is liberally illustrated with my photographs. Many of these journeys were individual but some were group tours. The places visited include various parts of Turkey, in particular the eastern part of that country. It also includes visits to Jordan, Albania, Uzbekistan, Warsaw, Iran, the former Russian Republic of Georgia, Kosovo, and Armenia with Nagorno Karabagh. I am still travelling, and in 2013, I went to Myanmar (Burma), Bulgaria, and the semi-autonomous province of Iraqi Kurdistan. In the last of these, we found ourselves to be the first tourist group ever to visit and as a result were greeted by the Minister of Tourism and the collected representatives of the local press and television networks.

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Crisis and Comeback Cork in the Eighties


Free Download Michael Moynihan, "Crisis and Comeback: Cork in the Eighties"
English | 2018 | ISBN: 1848893566 | EPUB | pages: 240 | 1.0 mb
How does a city survive its worst recession in living memory? Cork entered the 1980s with swagger. The 1970s had been dominated nationally by the city’s favourite son, Jack Lynch, who was Taoiseach for much of the decade. And the sense of superiority wasn’t confined to the political arena. The city had given Ireland a world-class rock star in Rory Gallagher, and boasted one of the first internationally recognised film festivals. Cork Patrick Street on a Saturday afternoon heaved with shoppers in Roches Stores and Cash’s. There was a stability to the city, anchored by the institutions from which it drew its the university, the Murphy’s and Beamish breweries, the English Market. Underpinning those were key employers such as Ford, Dunlop and Verolme – internationally recognised names, deeply rooted in the fabric of the community after providing decades of employment. Confident and busy, Cork seemed to buck the trend of the late 1970s, as the ripples of the oil crisis spread economic uncertainty across the globe. But by the middle of the 1980s, the city had been plunged into chaos. Ford, Dunlop and Verolme all closed within eighteen months. Every institution in the city seemed under threat. The two breweries came close to shutting down. The English Market survived not one but two devastating fires. Cork Corporation strongly considered turning it into a car park. The uncertainty spread beyond the unemployment statistics, horrific though they were, manifesting itself in religious hysteria, protest voting and crime. Cork had become a rust-belt region. But a spiky self-belief, determined natives and vital new industries made all the difference as the city began the often painful transition from traditional manufacturing to what we now term ‘the knowledge economy’. Drawing on extensive interviews with politicians, workers, writers and industrialists, Michael Moynihan weaves a sweeping tapestry of the city at a critical juncture. In a rich narrative, he tells the compelling story of how Cork’s eventual status as a high-tech hub was won.

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Triumph of the Yuppies America, the Eighties, and the Creation of an Unequal Nation [Audiobook]


Free Download Triumph of the Yuppies: America, the Eighties, and the Creation of an Unequal Nation (Audiobook)
English | ASIN: B0CKNK6RMN | 2024 | 10 hours and 15 minutes | M4B@64 kbps | 294 MB
Author: Tom McGrath
Narrator: Stacy Carolan

The "entertaining and insightful" first history of the Yuppie phenomenon, chronicling the roots, rise, triumph and (seeming) fall of the young urban professionals who radically altered American life between 1980 and 1987 (New York Times bestselling author Ben Mezrich). By the time their obituary was being written in the late 1980s, Yuppies-the elite, uber‑educated faction of the Baby Boom generation-had become a cultural punchline. But amidst the Yuppies’ preoccupation with money, work, and the latest status symbols, something serious was happening, too, something that continues to have profound ramifications on American culture four decades later. Brimming with lively and nostalgic details (think Jane Fonda, The Sharper Image, and over-the-top fashion), Triumph of the Yuppies charts Boomers’ transformation from hippy idealists in the late 1960s to careerists in the early 1980s, and details how marketers, the media, and politicians pivoted to appeal to this influential new group. Yuppie values had an undeniable impact on the worlds of fashion, food, and fitness, as well as affecting the broader culture-from gentrification and an obsession with career success to an indulgent materialism. Most significantly, the me‑first mindset typical of Yuppieness helped create the largest income inequality in a century. Tom McGrath’s masterful cultural history reveals how Yuppies reshaped American society. It is a portrait of America just as it was beginning to come apart-and the origin story of the fractured country we live in today.

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