The 1960 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

The 1960

Description:

Some say the true spirit of the 60 s was reflected in the rise and fall of President John F. Kennedy. His youthfulness and passion for grand ideas epitomized the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:43
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 15
Provided by: LENOV176
Learn more at: http://images.pcmac.org
Category:
Tags: kubrick

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The 1960


1
The 1960S
2
U.S. History in the 1960s
  • Some say the true spirit of the 60s was
    reflected in the rise and fall of President John
    F. Kennedy.
  • His youthfulness and passion for grand ideas
    epitomized the growing influence of youth
    culture.
  • Other views declare that Kennedys assassination
    was the beginning of the 60s with the resulting
    despair and conspiracy theories foreshadowing the
    many social movements that were deeply critical
    of government and traditional economic, social,
    and religious institutions.

3
  • It is clear that both themes are clear in these
    chaotic time youth culture presented itself more
    forcefully than ever, and social movements became
    more vigorous, critical, and violent.
  • The music of this timerevealing and heightening
    these trendsprovided the appropriate soundtrack.
  • Among the issues that divided Americans, none
    loomed larger than the Vietnam War and civil
    rights movement.

4
  • The intensity and organization of the civil
    rights movement increased greatly in the 1960s.
  • 4 young African-American students sat in at a
    segregated lunch counter in 1960 at Woolworths
    in Greensboro, NC. Other major protests occurred
    in Birmingham and Montgomery, AL.
  • On August 28, 1963, 250,000 Americansblack and
    whitetook part in the March on Washington. At
    this historic event, Martin Luther King Jr.
    delivered his I Have a Dream speech, which
    vocalized the movements goals and spirit to all
    Americans.

5
  • Following the March, congress passed the Civil
    Rights Act (1964), making discrimination based on
    race illegal.
  • Race riots erupted in Los Angeles in 1965, in
    Newark and Detroit in 1967, and in many cities
    following the assassination of King in 1968.
  • As the decade moved on, the movement became more
    militant, and earlier calls for integration and
    nonviolence gave way to Black Powerpromoted by
    the Black Panthers, among others.

6
  • The antiwar movement paralleled the civil rights
    movement. By mid-decade, America had combat
    troops in Vietnam and the number of American
    casualties began to increase.
  • Many young Americans questioned the wisdom of the
    war, and dissent became increasingly vocal and
    organized, especially on college campuses.
  • Studentswhite and black, rich and poorsat in
    and burned their draft cards some even escaped
    to Canada to avoid the war.

7
  • At the 1968 Democratic National Convention, an
    antiwar demonstration turned violent.
  • In 1970, four students were killed at Kent State
    University in Ohio, and two more at Jackson State
    College in Mississippi.
  • In addition to the civil rights and antiwar
    movements, many other movements familiar to us
    today first appeared in the 1960s.

8
  • The feminist movement was nurtured significantly
    by Betty Friedans book The Feminine Mystique,
    which argued that women were constrained by the
    traditional role of homemaker.
  • In 1966, the National Organization of Women (NOW)
    was founded with Friedan as its first president.
  • Environmentalism grew when Rachel Carsons Silent
    Spring drew the countrys attention to the
    dangers resulting from the indiscriminate and
    persistent use of pesticides such as DDT.

9
  • Similarly, the consumer protection movement got
    its spark from Ralph Naders book Unsafe at Any
    Speed, which accused automobile companies of
    placing profits and style ahead of safety in the
    design of their vehicles.
  • All of these causes raised serious doubts about
    previously accepted beliefs concerning American
    life and culture, taking on the status quo
    (current state of being) with militant passion.

10
  • The entertainment business was also going through
    important, and in some cases, turbulent changes.
  • Network programming had almost entirely migrated
    from radio to television.
  • Driven by advertising demographics, AM radio
    continued to be mostly a regional or local
    affair, devoted to hit records and old favorites
    FM radio, however, at first a kind of undeveloped
    wilderness of college lectures, religious
    programming, and classical music, began
    developing into the musical home of the hippie
    counterculture after 1967.

11
  • In television, ideas of 1950s normalcy
    reinforced by shows such as Leave it to Beaver
    continued in the 60s, typified by inoffensive
    shows like My Three Sons.
  • The first show to challenge this sense of
    domestic normalcy was The Beverly Hillbillies in
    1962, which placed a Tennessee backwoods family
    in the center of Beverly Hills. At first, the
    hillbillies seemed to be the target of the shows
    humor, but then it became clear that a better
    strategy was to use the hillbillies to make the
    normal folks look foolish.

12
  • This soft critique of 1950s normalcy continued
    in My Favorite Martian, Bewitched, and I Dream of
    Jeannieall shows based on the idea that unique,
    supernatural powers needed to be concealed from
    public view, lest the one who had them be
    considered abnormal.
  • The youth counterculture of the second half of
    the 1960s would be far less playful in its
    critiques of 1950s values.

13
  • Movies in the 1960s reflected the pressures of
    the Cold War as well as the emergence of the
    elegant jet set. Beginning with Dr. No in
    1962, James Bond fought communist secret agents
    in a continuing series of feature films, jetting
    around the globe.
  • While James Bond might represent the Wests
    confidence in foiling its Cold War enemies, some
    filmmakers were much more skeptical. Stanley
    Kubrick offered a stinging critique of the Cold
    War arms race in his Dr. Strangelove or How I
    Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.

14
  • The 60s drew to a close the same way they
    began with a mixture of hope and fear.
  • On July 20, 1969, the United States was unified
    in celebration astronauts Neil Armstrong and
    Buzz Aldrin realized President Kennedys
    challenge to put a man on the moon by the end of
    the decade.
  • However, this brief moment of unity did nothing
    to heal the countrys wounds over Vietnam and
    civil rights. Wars and riots were raged on, and
    rock was raging with them.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com