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Going to Seedis the unforgettable firsthand account of how the hippie movement flowered in the late 1960s, appeared spent by the Thatcher-consumed 1980s,yet became the seedbed for progressive reform we now take for granted and continues to inspire generations of rebels and visionaries.At a young age, Simon Fairlie rejected the rat race and embarked on a new trip to find his own path. He dropped out of Cambridge University to hitchhike to Istanbul and bicycle through India. Simon established a commune in France, was arrested multiple times for squatting and civil disobedience, and became a…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Going to Seedis the unforgettable firsthand account of how the hippie movement flowered in the late 1960s, appeared spent by the Thatcher-consumed 1980s,yet became the seedbed for progressive reform we now take for granted and continues to inspire generations of rebels and visionaries.At a young age, Simon Fairlie rejected the rat race and embarked on a new trip to find his own path. He dropped out of Cambridge University to hitchhike to Istanbul and bicycle through India. Simon established a commune in France, was arrested multiple times for squatting and civil disobedience, and became a leading figure in protests against the British governments road building programmes of the 1980s and later in legislative battles to help people secure access to land for low impact, sustainable living. Over the course of fifty years, we witness a mans drive for self-sufficiency, freedom, authenticity and a deep connection to the land.Simon Fairlie grew up in a middle-class household in leafymiddle England. His path had been laid out for him by his father: boarding school, Oxbridge and a career in journalism. But everything changed when Simons life ran headfirst into Londons counterculture in the 1960s. He finds Beat poetry, blues music, cannabis and antiVietnam War protests and a powerful lust to be free. Instead of becoming a celebrated Fleet Street journalist like his father, Simon becomes a labourer, a stonemason, a farmer, a scythesman, a magazine editor and a writer of a very different sort. He shares the highs of his experience, alongside the painful costs of his ongoing search for freedom estrangement from his family, financial insecurity and the loss of friends and lovers to the excesses of the 1960s, 70s, and 80s.Going to Seed questions the current trajectory of Western progress explosive consumerism, growing inequality and environmental devastation; its for anyone who wonders how we got to such a place. Simons story is for anyone who wonders what the world might look like if we began to chart a radically different course.
Autorenporträt
Simon Fairlie worked for twenty years variously as an agricultural labourer, vine worker, shepherd, fisherman, builder and stonemason before being ensnared by the computer in 1990. He was a coeditor of The Ecologist magazine for four years until he joined a farming community in 1994 where he managed the cows, pigs and a working horse. He now runs a micro dairy at Monkton Wyld Court, a charity and cooperative in rural Dorset. Simon is a founding editor of The Land magazine, and he earns a living by selling scythes. He is the author of Low Impact Development: Planning and People in a Sustainable Countryside (1996) and Meat: A Benign Extravagance (2010).