Page 182 - Constructing Craft
P. 182

Chapter Nine: Turn on, Tune in, Drop out






               In 1966, when Timothy Leary, an American academic and writer, called on young

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               people to ‘turn on, tune in, drop out’  he appeared to be offering new guidelines to a
               generation that had become increasingly dissatisfied with the post war ‘affluent
               society’ . As the craft writer Peter Gibbs later observed, ‘the time was ripe to drop

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               out, buy a potter’s wheel and become self-sufficient’.  The hippies – as the
               supporters of the new movement were often labelled – fervently believed they had
               discovered something new. They were rejecting the past, a new consciousness was

               emerging – it was the Age of Aquarius. The hippies believed they were the advance
               guard of a revolutionary movement that would change the world.








































                                Timothy Leary. ‘Turn on, Tune in, Drop out’. Photo: Meher
                                Baba.


               In New Zealand many of the ideas and concerns that hippies held received some
               official attention when a new Labour Government was elected in 1972. Its

               charismatic leader, Norman Kirk, recognised that New Zealand society was


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