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+"The Times Are A Changin'" by Bob Dylan
+ - Protest song, inspired by folk music
+ - Telling the "old generation" to get out of the way of the new one.
+ - Big generation gap in the 1960s, with many college students
+ questioning the establishment, like Johnson admin and the war.
+
+Topics
+- Black Power
+- The Left and counterculture
+- New Feminism
+
+70% of African-Americans living in "blighted urban areas"
+- Losing faith in Christian non-violence
+- Inner city poverty led to Race Riots in Los Angeles
+ - $35bn in property damage.
+ - White liberals believed Black Power was to blame for breakdown in
+ civility in race relations, rather than poverty, police presence.
+ - Based in beliefs that: for too long black people accepted white
+ people and white institutions' promises which were controlling and
+ defining black America.
+ - Black people insisted on shaping their own movement, agenda, and
+ destiny.
+ - Stokey Carmichael: "This nation does not function by morality,
+ love, and nonviolence; it functions by power, and power requires
+ that blacks, not well-intentioned whites, control their own
+ institutions, their own neighborhoods."
+ - "Black is beautiful." Some black people didn't *want*
+ integration
+ - Malcolm X embraced political independence for black people,
+ racial pride, and a rejection of 'white society.'
+ - He grew up without his parents, at 6 father killed and
+ soon after mother put in mental care.
+ - Malcom had become a drug dealer, thief, criminal, pimp in
+ Mass State Prison. Reformed by it. Joined Chicagoan
+ Religious Sect of "Nation of Islam." (actually an
+ amalgamation of various movements, not Orthodox Islam)
+ - Elijah Mohammed, leader of Nation of Islam, preached
+ separation between the races. Believed there could be no
+ peace between whihte people and black people. Preached that
+ whites were devils.
+ - Malcolm becomes a preacher making speeches attacking white
+ racism and supporting black power.
+ - Called modern Civil Rights leaders modern-day Uncle Toms.
+ - "Who ever heard of a revolution where they sang 'we shall
+ overcome?'"
+ - Malcolm completed the Hajj to Mecca, but moved away from
+ Mohammed. Assassins from Nation of Islam killed Malcolm X.
+ - He was not the only black militant. Black Power.
+ - Carmichael pushed whites out of the organization
+ - "Smash everything western civilization has created."
+Black Panthers
+- Militant self-defense organization
+- Called for end to police terrorism, decent housing, schools, full
+ employment.
+- Wore black berets, leather clothes, and armed themselves with rifles
+ and shotguns.
+- Huey Newton did not believe in nonviolent movements because they
+ didn't work
+ - Police the police, use violence to maintain power.
+ - Sought to develop self-governing communities (separation from
+ whites, self-determinatino)
+- Organized free breakfast programs for children, clinics, job programs.
+- Cities across America developed chapters of Black Panthers.
+- Defense against police from right to bear arms.
+ - Violent Black Panthers "constituted a threat to America." Hoover
+ (FBI?) built a comprehensive plan to undermine Black Power
+ community
+ - FBI + infighting destroyed the movement by '80s
+- MLK stressed that war in Vietnam was stealing from the poor, and black
+ soldiers were dying disproportionately in Vietnam.
+ - Black Studies programs in schools and colleges
+ - Black mayors, representatives
+
+
+The Youth Revolt and the New Left
+- Young people realized they couldn't support the inequality "sustaining
+ the American Dream"
+- More than half of Americans were under 30. Baby boomers. Hadn't
+ experienced economic depression or major war.
+- Universities were huge institutions dependent on government funding,
+ esp. state department.
+ - Students wary of military-industrial complex.
+- Disillusioned young people flowed into two distinct but often
+ overlapping movements: the New Left and the Counterculture.
+- UMich students organized in SDS, many children of communists,
+ leftists, or Jewish.
+ - One, Hayden, wrote a manifesto: bred in moderate comfort, housed
+ in universities, looking uncomfortably at the world we inherited.
+ - Adopted the term "New Left" to describe their attempts at
+ improving democracy rather than the old left of orthodox Marxism.
+ - Very pragmatic. More than 100 colleges had SDS (Students for a
+ Democratic Society) chapters
+ - Worked with Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee to support
+ voter registration in Mississippi.
+ - School chancellor banned student protests, and students had a
+ sit-in. Students formed free speech movement.
+ - Originally for students rights
+ - Eventually mounted a larger criticism of the larger system and
+ bureaucracy.
+The Antiwar Movement
+- Young men didn't want to fight the conflict
+ - Overwhelmingly a poor man's war.
+ - Young men often were able to go to college to delay
+ - Some 2K young men ignored draft notices, and 4K served prison
+ - Conscientious objector status: present evidence authenticating
+ their moral, ethical, or religious opposition to war and mil.
+ - When granted, had to perform "alternative civilian
+ service." "Hell no, we won't go." Fleeing to other
+ countries. Fail the physical tests.
+ - Black and Latino draftees twice as likely to be selected.
+The Counterculture
+- Most rebellious Americans were not narrowly political
+ - They did not want elected office, but cultural change.
+- Disaffected young rebels, hippies
+- Rejected pursuit of wealth, careers
+ - Embraced simple living, peace, freedom
+ - Lead considerably more virtuous lives than their fellow citizens.
+- Hippies preferred to drop out of society. "Make love, not war."
+ - Whereas New Left wanted social change.
+ - Egalitarian, optimistic, indulgent: rejected corporations,
+ military, colleges, families, etc.
+- Mind-altering drugs, casual sex, communes, unusual casual clothing.
+- Timothy Leary, "high priest of psychedelic revolution" dismissed from
+ Harvard as a prof for using students in tests of drugs: "Tune in, turn
+ on, and drop out."
+ - Crusaded for "expanded consciousness"
+ - LSD made some young people commit suicide
+ - Nixon called Leary "most dangerous man in America."
+ - Illegal drugs like amphetamines, LSD, heroin were centralized in
+ counterculture.
+ - Bob Dylan declared "everyone must get stoned"
+ - Summer of Love (1967): series of nationwide events protesting
+ Vietnam War and celebrating Youth Revolt.
+Yippies (like Hippies)
+- Jerry Rubin wanted a "fun revolution"
+ - Comedians, politics, "overthrow the power structure"
+ - "The first part of the revolutionary program is to kill your
+ parents." End of the Protestant Ethic: "Screw work. We want to
+ find ourselves."
+- Wanted to offer the people an alternative lifestyle
+ - "Other than conform or die"
+ - Based on superficial idea of Native Americans.
+- Abbie Hoffman wanted to "build a new nation"
+ - Threatened to put LSD in Chicago water supply
+ - Nominated pig for president, urged voters to put "none of the
+ above"
+- For some, Hippie culture was about experimenting with alternative
+ lifestyle, like deliberate communes.
+ - Many moved to the country side or set up communes in cities.
+
+- Hippies' favorite performers became those under the influence of
+ mind-altering drugs, the acid rock bands like Grateful Dead, Jefferson
+ Airplane.
+ - Giant "picnics with music" concerts.
+ - 3 Days of Peace & Music (Woodstock)
+ - Rainstorms, thunder, mud
+ - "Technicolor, mud-splattered reflection of 1960s"
+ - Th
+ - Foolishly hired Hell's Angel motorcycle gang; one killed an
+ African-American man, destroying much innocence.
+ - By 1969, Hippie phenomenon began to end based on criminal
+ culture: mental and physical illness of flower children,
+ poverty, etc. But strands survived in yoga, meditation, food
+ co-ops, etc.
+
+Feminism
+- First Wave was about right to vote
+- Second Wave challenged conventional "Female Domesticity," asked for
+ equality in the workplace.
+- Many women in 1960s did not believe equality was possible or even
+ desirable
+ - A poll showed the majority believing the man should make decisions
+- Although Equal Pay Act made it illegal to underpay women for the same
+ job, discrimination and harassment continued
+- Betty Friedan, supplemented husband's income by writing for newspapers
+ - Leader of postwar women's student
+ - At Smith College, wrote newspaper and argued against the war
+ - Progressive journalist arguing for labor unions,
+ equal-pay-equal-work, end to racial or gender discrimination in
+ housing.
+- "The Femininine Mystique" by Friedan
+ - Launched the Third Wave of feminism
+ - Argued upper and middle class women had lost ground since the war,
+ becoming full-time wives and mothers. "Happy Homemaker syndrome
+ undermined intellectual capacity and public ambition."
+ - Did not discuss women of color, poor people, or those w/o
+ homes
+ - Blamed discrimination against women on "massive postwar
+ campaign" by advertisers, women's mags. to embrace "feminine
+ mystique," where "fulfillment came only with marriage and
+ motherhood."
+ - defined 'the problem that has no name.'
+ - Women working outside the home, which Friedan wasn't well aware
+ of, discovered their dissatisfaction with working two full-time
+ jobs (outside and inside the home)
+ - National Organization of Women (NOW) promoted "true equality for
+ all women in America."
+- Ms. magazine from Gloria Steinam
+ - Feminist periodical with national readership
+ - 8K copies sold out in 8 days.
+ - Had 1/2 mn subscribers by end of first year.
+ - Gave energy and expanded scope of third wave.
+ - Steinam studied on scholarship in India.
+ - Impoverished upbringing.
+ - Magazine called Show paid her to go undercover as a Playboy bunny
+ at the Playboy Club. Wrote "I was a Playboy Bunny."
+ - Degrading treatment and inequitable pay. Made her famous.
+ - Political writer, favored progressivism and feminism.
+ - Steinam had an illegal abortion, and told her story to a 1969
+ event; proved lifechanging as she "sensed a great blinding
+ lightbulb." Committed herself to women's liberation.
+ - Insisted on sharing the lectern with a woman of color.
+ - "Many diverse feminisms"
+ - Quickly became the face of feminism
+ - "Nothing for women to read controlled by women."
+ - Listed editors alphabetically so as not to imply a hierarchy
+ because "hierarchies were male."
+ - The magazine focused on controversial stuff like abortions,
+ pornography, discrimination.
+ - Supported Women's Studies
+- Friedan accused Steinam of "female chauvinism"
+ - Steinam called marriage as prostitution
+ - Critics accused her of "liking men too much"
+ - Alice Walker, black woman, resigned, believing mag covers showed
+ white women disproportionately.
+ - She persevered
+
+New Feminists, Women's livers
+- Lived through Civil War
+- Held women's meetings about the problems and society
+ - Realized that "living as a woman in a man's world" was their
+ shared problem.
+ - Sexual politics: women organize a political movement
+ - Feminism wasn't previously politicized
+ - Friedan's radical position: "the personal is political"
+ - Friedan called lesbianism a divisive distraction.
+ - NOW eventually endorsed gay and lesbian rights.
+ - Want to transform "every aspect of society"
+
+Miss America Beauty Pageant, Atlantic City, 1968
+- Women organize a protest at the pageant.
+- Both protest the pageant and the US's general attitude toward women.
+- Organized by a radical feminist believing "the personal is political."
+ - Wanted to bring the Women's Liberation movement "into the public
+ arena"
+- Boycott of Companies about the pageant
+- Didn't allow male reporters to interview protestors
+- Document of 10 Reasons Why They're Protesting
+ - The consumeristic corporate endorsement of the pageant
+ - The value of beauty as women's worth
+ - Encouragement of bland, apolitical woman's place.
+ - "No more Miss America"
+- "All women are beautiful"; "Cattle parades are demeaning to human
+ beings"
+- Freedom Trash Can of "oppressive objects"
+ - Officials asked women not to set the Trash Can on fire because the
+ wooden boardwalk was flammable
+- This did introduce feminism into the mainstream consciousness.
+- This thread continued into the 1970s