Well, I didn't actually read all of this, but much of it in preparation for speaking to Italian university students about music and culture in San Francisco from the beats/jazz, hippies/rock, the the art punks/punk. Although obviously not aimed at someone like me, old enough to have lived through much of the history recounted here, the book is a well-organized history of some of the key moments of US popular culture and particularly the fringy, anti-establishment figures and movements and how they work into the mainstream. I, myself, as both a US person, artist, and intellectual (rather than active or violent) revolutionary, would have used a more Marxist framework and delved deeper into how capitalism both regularizes rebellion and promotes it by selling whatever commodities rebellion produces, often making rebellion appear as inert as conformity, or at least as ridiculous, a mere fashion choice among others. But, well, that's not what Banti wanted to do, obviously. I think he just wanted to lay out the figures of US popular culture for the next generation--those who didn't live through it and are from a slightly different Italian culture--to be able to see and understand some of its significance.