
My Hometown Was in the 1980s
by "new Weekly"
About This Novel
This book is based on the 400 special issues of "New Weekly", with unpublished special interviews from the 1980s and panoramic life, culture and economic materials added. The soul is in the 1980s, the mind is in the 1990s, and the body is in the new century. This is the Chinese syllogism. I can't go back to the 1980s, and because I can't go back, I miss home even more. The soul, hometown, love and fear of a generation are all entangled in an unavoidable time and space node. A comprehensive inventory and systematic collection of China in the 1980s. A chronological history belonging to the Chinese. A brand-new dictionary of the 1980s, taking you back to the familiar 1980s. Interviews with 400 enlighteners, artists, entrepreneurs, and scholars in the 1980s. Sincere dialogue between the 1980s and the post-80s generation, re-examining an era and its potential impact. Will the 1980s become a new driving force for Chinese people to face the real dilemma?
What Readers Think
Rating
Community(0)
Official(1)Scraped 13d ago
There is no way to go back to the 1980s, and there is no need to go back.
As a person born in the late 1980s, I don't have many memories of that era. Instead, I need to listen to others talk about it, but I am also full of curiosity. In fact, there is really no need to overly yearn for, beautify or even deify a certain era. Every era has its problems and opportunities. When you really understand the temptation and progress of the 1980s, whether you open the window or close the door, you will understand that the progress or regression of today's society is just the same temptation and progress. Despite this, I still really want to travel back to the 1980s and fall in love with the young rock n' roll boys of that time!
Rating
Community(0)
Official(1)Scraped 13d ago
There is no way to go back to the 1980s, and there is no need to go back.
As a person born in the late 1980s, I don't have many memories of that era. Instead, I need to listen to others talk about it, but I am also full of curiosity. In fact, there is really no need to overly yearn for, beautify or even deify a certain era. Every era has its problems and opportunities. When you really understand the temptation and progress of the 1980s, whether you open the window or close the door, you will understand that the progress or regression of today's society is just the same temptation and progress. Despite this, I still really want to travel back to the 1980s and fall in love with the young rock n' roll boys of that time!
