Hvad er det dyrebareste, ungdommen har? Fremtiden som et åbent rum, et forum for drømme og kritiske idéer, for selvrealisering og samfundsforandring, for det uhørte og det usagte. Hvad er talent? Hvad er kreativitet? Hvad er kritik? Hvad er retfærdighedssans? Hvad vil det sige at være en generation? Den tyske sociolog Ulrich Bech har talt om de unge som en side-effekts-generation. De er børn af smartphones og internettet. Hvad vil denne teknologi betyde for de unges oprør? Vil det tage en form, vi slet ikke kender eller genkender, eller vil oprøret helt udeblive? Med udgangspunkt i sine egne møder med danske unge og i bl.a. tv-serien SKAM undersøger Carsten Jensen, hvem de unge er. En kosmopolitisk jeg-svag, men vi-stærk mennesketype eller en marginaliseret generation af afmægtige?
Carsten Jensen was born 1952. He first made his name as a columnist and literary critic for the Copenhagen daily Politiken, and has written novels, essays and travel books.
Jensen was awarded the Golden Laurels for "I Have Seen the World Begin" and the Danske Banks Litteraturpris, Denmark’s most prestigious literary award, for "We, the Drowned."
One of the best books I’ve read in a long time— a tragedy that it isn’t translated to English, because I want to recommend it to everyone that I know. The author takes on a lot of big, complicated topics, and manages to discuss them in a way I related too and agreed with (which is not always the case when Danish authors try their hand at American politics!). Very well written and thought provoking book, written as a continuous series of small essays, each with their own topic. This was a fun and engaging format, as each section led into the next, allowing big ideas/concepts to be developed very naturally over the course of the book.
Bogens ambition er ædel men spoleres af en rodet struktur, hvori selve pointen forsvinder. Som 110 post-its skrevet uafhængigt af hinanden og tvunget ind i en orden, der ikke eksisterer.