Book Review--Absolute Beginners
Absolute Beginners, published in 1958, is a tale told by a protagonist who is deeply immersed in the pop culture of his time, the fast-evolving fashion and pop culture of jazz clubs and coffee bars of late 1950s London, a city on the cusp of profound and irreversible cultural and social change. This is the exact point in popular culture when, as Ed Vuillamy of the Guardian says, in reference to teenagers, “the kids were taking over”, a decade in which the “mod” sensibility with its love of sharp, well-tailored clothes and modern jazz is defining the essence of what is “cool”. The protagonist, who remains nameless throughout the story like the lead in Antonioni’s 1966 film Blow Up , is a dandy photographer tripping through the chic London streets in his “Roman suit”, an allusion to the tailored jackets favored by the new “mod” youth sub-culture, wielding his Rolleflex, and snapping at arresting scenes, ever hungry for style. The narrative style certainly has plenty of propulsive en...