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Untitled Essay Research Paper Massive black rebellions (стр. 2 из 2)

it symbolized the freedom and idealism of the 1960s. Critics argue that Woodstock

represented much of what was wrong with the 60’s: a glorification of

drugs, a loosening of sexual morality and a socially corrosive disrespect

for authority.

Whether one is a supporter or a critic, it is undeniable that Woodstock was

one of the major climaxes of the hippie movement: a culmination of all of

the peace and love ideals in one place. After Woodstock, the movement was

on the downswing. One could argue that Woodstock was the grand finale, with

the seventies arriving soon after it and there was a general “been there,

done that”(interview) mentality which created the seventies, a decade of

disco, and doom, never quite living up to the intensity of the sixties.

The 1960’s, then, did more than just “swing”. Many of the values and

conventions of the immediate post- war world were called into question, and

although many of the questions had not been satisfactorily answered by the

end of the decade, society would never be the same again.

In conclusion, the hippy culture arose as a result of vast political changes

occurring in North America and beyond and not as a result of drugs and music.

The drugs and music were a by-product of the hippy culture, but by no means

a reason for it’s occurrence. The previous pages cite the more relevant

political and social milestones, which, I believe were directly responsible

for the evolution of the hippy culture. These milestones affected everyone,

one way or another, either directly or indirectly. They changed the way people

thought. You would be hard pressed to find someone over the age of about

forty-five who, to this day, cannot remember what they were doing the day

Kennedy was shot, and how they were affected by it. The sixties simply evolved;

a microcosm of numerous political and social change that swept the then current

generation. The hippies were simply reacting to changes in society and, in

reacting to these changes, left an indelible mark on the history books of

our time.

Bibliography

Archer, Jales. The Incredible Sixties. Orlando: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,

1987.

Benson, Kathleen, and Haskins, James. The Sixties Reader. New York: Viking

Kestrel, 1988.

Collier, Peter, Horowitz, David. Destructive Generation: Second Thoughts

About the’60s. New York: Summit, 1989.

Dickstein, Morris. Gates of Eden: American Culture in the Sixties. New York:

Basic Books, 1977.

Gitlin, Todd. The Sixties: Years of Hope, Days of Rage. New York: Bantam,

1987.

Ingham, John. Sex’N’Drugs’N’Rock’N’Roll. Toronto:

Canadian Scholars Press, 1988.

Kostash, Myrna. Long Way From Home:The Story of the Sixties Generation in

Canada. Toronto: James Lorimer & Company, 1980.

Martin, Elizabeth. 57 Edgemore Dr., Etobicoke, Ontario. Interview, 12 February

1997.

Oakley, Ronald. God’s Country: America in the Fifties. New York: Red

Dembner, 1986.

Rosen, Obst. The Sixties: The Decade Remembered Now, by the People Who Lived

Them. Toronto: Random House Publisher, 1977.

Roy, Andy. Great Assassinations. New York: Independent Publishing, 1994.

Stern, Jane, and Micheal. Sixties People. New York: Knopf, 1990.

Tucker, Ken, and Stokes, Geoffrey, and Ward, Ed. Rock of Ages: The Rolling

Stone History of Rock and Roll. New York: Rolling Stone Press, 1986.

Weiss, Bill. King And His Struggles. New York: Penny Publishing, 1987.

Yinger, Milton. Countercultures: The Promise and Peril of a world Turned

Upside Down. New York:

Macmillan Publishing, 1982.