{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Context XXI","provider_url":"http:\/\/contextxxi.org","title":"The Sound and the Fury\n","author_name":"Ken&nbsp;Knabb (translation) \u25aa \nSituationistische Internationale","width":"1200","height":"800","url":"https:\/\/licra.contextxxi.org\/the-sound-and-the-fury.html","html":"\u003Ch4 class='title'\u003E\u003Ca href='https:\/\/licra.contextxxi.org\/the-sound-and-the-fury.html'\u003EThe Sound and the Fury\n\u003C\/a\u003E\u003C\/h4\u003E\u003Cblockquote class='spip'\u003EThere is a lot of talk these days about angry, raging youth. The reason people are so fond of talking about them is that, from the aimless riots of Swedish adolescents to the proclamations of England\u2019s would-be literary movement, the \u201cAngry Young Men,\u201d there is the same utter innocuousness, the same reassuring flimsiness. Products of a period in which the dominant ideas and lifestyles are decomposing, a period that has seen tremendous breakthroughs in the domination of nature without&nbsp;\u003Ca href=\"..\/the-sound-and-the-fury.html\" class=' pts_suite'\u003E(...)\u003C\/a\u003E\u003C\/blockquote\u003E\n"}