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Published byGrant Hudson Modified over 9 years ago
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■Essential Questions ■Essential Questions: –What were the principal causes & effects of the counterculture movements of the 1960s & 1970s? –What does it mean to be a “hippie?” –What is the “establishment?”
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A Generation in Conflict A Generation in Conflict: 1965-1974
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A Decade of Protest: 1965-1974 ■The decade from 1965 to 1974 was marked by protest due to: –Escalation of the Vietnam War –Attack on middle-class values –Increased college enrollment ■The initial liberal protests began on college campuses but soon inspired other, national protests: Native-Americans Women Hippies Mexican-Americans African-Americans Protests against Vietnam linked other social criticism—The “war abroad,” intensified a “war at home” The Sixties generation was the best educated in American history
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The Student Revolt Free Speech ■The student protest movement began at UC-Berkeley in 1964 with the Free Speech movement –Students protested the “corporate face” & “1950s rules” of UC-Berkeley –Students rioted when denied a political voice on campus Students for a Democratic Society ■This inspired the formation of Students for a Democratic Society to end racism, poverty, & violence Refused to allow Free Speech movement to collect money for off-campus causes
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Mario Savio & the Free Speech riots The Berkeley protests & University of Michigan-based SDS inspired riots on campuses across the USA Brown University ended required courses & grades Many colleges ended “in loco parentis” rules
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The Cultural Revolution ■The student protests coincided with youth counter-culture in 1965 ■Beginning in San Francisco & spreading throughout the US, the “hippie” culture emphasized: –Sexual expression –Clothing –Drugs –Music Increase in premarital sex & use of the “pill” “Summer of Love” in 1967 Use of psychoactive & hallucinogenic drugs “Everyone must get stoned,” Bob Dylan Harvard professor Timothy Leary: “Let’s all try LSD!! Tune in, turn on, & drop out!” Folk music British invasion & electric rock Acid rock
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Music was an important element to 1960s counter-culture Folk singers like Joan Baez & Bob Dylan (until Dylan discovered the electric guitar) “Electric rock” like The Beatles “Acid rock” like the Grateful Dead
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Drugs Sex Rock ‘n’ Roll Is this the nation’s youth?? Mostly children from upper-middle class families No work ethic?
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Social Protests of the 1960s & 1970s
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"Black Power" economic ■In the late 1960s, civil rights from political to economic equality –Leadership shifted from MLK’s nonviolent protest to militancy –Civil rights began to reflect the overt embrace of black culture & pride: dashikis, afros, “dap,” rejection of “slave names,” & the “black is beautiful” motto More than 50% of northern blacks lived in poverty “I’m black & I’m proud!” —James Brown
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"Black Power" Stokely Carmichael ■SNCC leader Stokely Carmichael: –Told blacks to seize power where they outnumber whites –Called for black-controlled unions, co-ops, & political parties Black Panthers ■The Black Panthers dedicating themselves to defending blacks from police brutality & serving their communities “Political power comes through the barrel of a gun” —Huey Newton
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“Brown Power” ■Mexican-Americans began to advocate for their rights: –“La Raza” called for cultural awareness, voter registration, education & poverty reforms –César Chávez Nat’l Farm Workers' Assoc –César Chávez organized the Nat’l Farm Workers' Assoc to demand better pay for pickers –“Chicanos” called for & won bilingual education programs
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“Pink Power” ■Women's Liberation movement demanded increased rights & an end to sexism in America: –Friedan’s Feminine Mystique criticized housewife life –Nat’l Org of Women –Nat’l Org of Women called for equal pay, child care, rape laws, & anti-abortion laws –Equal Rights Amendment –Equal Rights Amendment was revived to end sexism …were still seen as “homemakers” In the 1960s, women were still employed in stereotypical jobs… …& unmarried adults outnumbered married adults for the first time But…in most families, both parents worked out of the home Growth of female-run small businesses helped overcome corporate “glass ceiling” In 1973, the Supreme Court upheld abortion rights in Roe v Wade In the late 1960s, the “pill” became widely available
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State Voting on the ERA The ERA by fell 3 states shy of the ¾ needed for ratification
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“Rainbow Power” ■The Gay Liberation movement started in 1969 after the Stonewall Riot in New York City –The Gay Liberation Front demanded end to discrimination & rallied gays to “come out” –The American Psychiatry Assoc ended its classification of homosexuality as a disease –½ of all states changed their sodomy & employment laws
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“Red Power” ■The American Indian movement sought to service its communities & regain lost lands: –“Indians of All Tribes” took Alcatraz Island in 1969 & called attention to the movement –“Trail of Broken Tears” in 1972 & “Long March” in 1978 helped lead to the return of lands across the country to tribes Resulted in marches on the Bureau of Indian Affairs in D.C. & Wounded Knee in S.D. A 5-month protest from California to D.C. to protest past U.S. treaty violations
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“Yellow Power” ■The Asian-American movement began with the formation of the Asian American Political Alliance: –Protested U.S. involvement in Vietnam & use of term “gooks” –Called for & received Asian- American studies in colleges, health services in Asian communities, & reparations for interned Japanese-Americans
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Civil Liberties ■Civil liberties were protected for people accused of crimes: –Gideon v Wainwright (1963) –Gideon v Wainwright (1963)— all citizens, no matter the crime, have the right to an attorney –Escobedo v Illinois (1964) –Escobedo v Illinois (1964)— citizens have the right to remain silent during interrogations –Miranda v Arizona (1966) –Miranda v Arizona (1966)— suspects must be told of their right against self-incrimination
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Conclusions ■The counterculture & “power protests” used similar methods: –Active & often-militant protest for civil & economic rights –Cultural pride & awareness ■These protests would continue but would faced confrontation by the conservative politics of the 1970s & 1980s “Black is Beautiful,” “Gay is Good,” & “Sisterhood is Powerful”
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